Music Legends – Iron Maiden Special Edition

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Contents The GENRE OF HEAVY METAL................................................................ 5 IRON MAIDEN............................................................................................ 9 Killers..................................................................................................... 25 THE NUMBER OF THE BEAST............................................................... 33 PIECE OF MIND........................................................................................39 POWERSLAVE......................................................................................... 43 SOMEWHERE IN TIME............................................................................ 47 SEVENTH SON OF A SEVENTH SON................................................... 53 NO PRAYER FOR THE DYING.............................................................. 59 FEAR OF THE DARK.............................................................................. 65 THE X FACTOR........................................................................................77 VIRTUAL XI.............................................................................................. 81 BEST OF THE BEAST............................................................................. 87 BRAVE NEW WORLD............................................................................... 91 EDWARD THE GREAT............................................................................ 97 DANCE OF DEATH................................................................................ 105 A MATTER OF LI FE AND DEATH........................................................109 The Final Frontier.......................................................................... 127 THE BOOK OF SOULS.......................................................................... 145 RECENT HISTORY................................................................................. 155


THE GENRE OF HEAVY METAL

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n the late sixties the foundations of a new genre of music were beginning to be laid by a group of British bands who were taking the rock music of their predecessors into uncharted waters and entering harder, more intense territory than those who had come before them. In June 1968, the Born to Be Wild single was released by North American rockers Steppenwolf. Containing the first recorded use of the phrase Heavy Metal (I like smoke and lightning/Heavy metal thunder/Racing with the wind/And the feelin’ that I’m under) the lyric to the song – which reached number two in the US charts – is a simple and evocative call to free-spirited people everywhere to embrace life and live it to the full. Across the Atlantic in England, the same year saw the formation of three of the most significant early bands in the genre that became known by the term Heavy Metal: Deep Purple, Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath. 5


These three groups, set no agenda other than to make music that sent thrills up their collective spine, and have since spawned a worldwide family tree of artists and fans that have found a home outside of the mainstream. Heavy Metal has continued to grow over the decades since its inception and, although many differing subgenres have developed, the central tenets of rejecting the middle-of-the-road and joining with like-minded enthusiasts has persisted. It has become more than just a type of music – for many of its followers it is a lifestyle, and this all-inclusive passionate immersion has helped Heavy Metal to live on when many other musical styles or fashions have faded and passed into memory. As the earlier bands’ initial buzz began to wane, a resurgence bloomed in the late-seventies with the New Wave of British Heavy Metal (affectionately termed ‘NWOBHM’) which saw the likes of Def Leppard, Diamond Head, Saxon and Motörhead take up the baton and recruit legions of new Iron Maiden fans along the way. Many of these bands are still recording and performing today – some still to the same twelve people in their local pub, others to tens of thousands at a time in packed arenas around the globe, but they all share a great passion for what they do and how they go about it. Of course, one band who were there when NWOBHM first exploded from the music fans’ speakers and who embody that spirit of family and integrity, is Iron Maiden. Their longevity and consistent outstanding quality are remarkable – but, to the dedicated fan, not surprising. Work hard at it, play good music with enthusiasm and honesty, and you will endear yourselves to the Heavy Metal crowd – and that is exactly what this bunch of down-to-earth lads have done for nearly five decades now. The spirit of Heavy Metal is something that runs deep in the fans’ veins – and it is embodied in the music of Iron Maiden. Despite this heritage, Iron Maiden are much, more than just a heavy metal band… In 1970, the United Kingdom laid claim to the 6


world’s first heavy metal act in Birmingham’s Black Sabbath. The history of that band deserves its own chronicle, but suffice it to say that this small and sceptr’d isle has gained much self-esteem from the pioneering work of Sabbath – if, that is, you don’t take into account their patchy output after their lead singer Ozzy Osbourne left them in 1979. For a while, the future of British metal looked dodgy, to say the least, with only Judas Priest and Motörhead left to fly the flag. However, the smiles were put back on Brit-metal fans’ faces with a vengeance when we invented heavy metal for the second time with the NWOBHM, or New Wave of British Heavy Metal. As Sabbath sank into mediocrity and other titans of heavy music such as Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple reached their sell-by dates, a new sound was required – and one duly emerged with enormous power and impact that same year, spearheaded by the state-of-the-art music of Iron Maiden. A deeply melodic, dexterous sense of musicianship wedded to aggressive riffs straight from the Sabbath early catalogue, Maiden’s early work was a blast of fresh air in the dank, stagnant atmosphere of late-70s metal, itself also under threat from the nascent punk movement. Along with future stars such as Def Leppard and Saxon and less successful (but still incredibly influential) NWOBHM bands such as Diamond Head and Blitzkrieg, Maiden drew the rock-consuming world’s attentions back to Britain – where, with the honourable exceptions of the USA, Germany and Scandinavia, they have remained focused ever since.

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This book includes a track-by-track analysis of Iron Maiden’s studio albums. This run-through of Iron Maiden’s recorded catalogue seeks to provide a clear, unbiased assessment of each of their albums. Each song and album is given a rating out of five as follows: ★★★★★ Absolutely essential ★★★★ Excellent ★★★ Average ★★ Poor ★ Terrible 8


IRON MAIDEN

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he road to glory goes back as far as 1975, when bassist Steve Harris was playing in a band called Smiler. Although Harris was a fan of many musical styles of the day – from prog-rockers such as Uriah Heep and Yes, through to glam acts such as The Sweet – he found himself increasingly dissatisfied with his bandmates, who didn’t see much merit in the self-penned songs he presented to them. During the 1975 Christmas season Steve left Smiler, intending to form a new act in order to perform original material with a musically aggressive edge. The name he chose for the brand new band was taken from the film The Man in the Iron Mask which he saw at this time – contrary to the rumour that the name Iron Maiden was a reference to the Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, despite her nickname and the fact that she appeared on early Maiden single covers… Harris later described the band’s inception: ‘I didn’t start the band as any kind of crusade against punk, as people seem to think… I couldn’t have because Maiden began in 1975, before all that, doing 9


East End pubs like The Ruskin Arms in East Ham and The Bridge House in Canning Town. It was when Zep and Purple were finishing – a lot of the influences came from them, the twin guitars from Wishbone Ash and Thin Lizzy, the time changes from Yes and Jethro Tull. We wanted to get all the ingredients in there and come up with something different. But after a year or so we realised we weren’t getting gigs any more… Then we did hate punk. We felt pissed off that these guys just picked up a guitar, jumped around a bit and, because of this so-called “energy”, they got the publicity and they got the work. But they couldn’t play and we could – though I know that sounds big-headed… I went to The Roxy once because we were offered a gig there and I’ll never forget it because there were geezers spitting all over each other! Well, we had quite a hardcore following and we knew if we went down there it’d all be off, ructions.’ Steve borrowed £3,000 from his aunt to keep the band going, as guitarist Dave Murray later told Q Magazine: ‘We had to be well organised. We started doing our own T-shirts, a couple of hundred at a time. The kids liked them because they were like an “up yours” to the people who put metal down all the time. We travelled all over the country to get gigs, Aberdeen and Blackpool over a weekend and back to work on Monday. We fixed up this big old Austin van we called “the Green Goddess” with space for the gear and nine bunks in the back for the band and the crew – who were mates, we couldn’t pay them. We’d sleep outside the gig and wake up in the morning with frost on the blankets… We had smoke machines, bubble machines, all home-made – bung a bit of dry ice in an electric kettle, that sort of thing. Then a singer we had, Dennis Wilcock, started us thinking. He had this stunt where he waved this sword about, then slashed the blade across his mouth and blood would come pouring out. Of course, it wasn’t real, but a couple of girls did faint right in front of him once – the Stars and Stripes Club, Ramsgate, I’ll never forget it. Still, he looked a bit daft, to be honest. So we came up with the first Eddie the ’Ead, this horrible mask which stood at the back of 10


the stage. We rigged up this pump we got out of a fish tank and at a given moment it would spit buckets of blood all over the drummer.’ Where Maiden immediately stood out was in their adaptation of the speed and attitude of the punk scene, while retaining the musically experimental edge of the prog-rock dinosaurs and even some fusion sensibilities thanks to the pioneering songwriting of Harris and the skills of the early line-ups, although musicians came and went with surprising frequency. Taking their cue from bands as diverse as Queen, Led Zeppelin, Wishbone Ash (whose distinctive twin-guitar sound rapidly evolved in Maiden’s early work), Queen and Judas Priest, Maiden quickly honed a set of steadfast set classics that have stood the test of time to this day, three decades and more later. Playing regular gigs on their home turf of London’s East End, Maiden endured constant personnel shuffles before a stable line-up coalesced. The first singer, Paul Day, was fired for a lack of charisma, while his successor Dennis Wilcock – who covered himself in makeup and fake blood on stage – took things too far the other way, although he did recruit a guitar-playing friend called Dave Murray into the band before his departure. This irked the extant guitarists – Dave Sullivan and Terry Rance – to the point where Harris was obliged to split the band for a short time, although Maiden subsequently reformed with Murray as the only guitarist. Another axeman, Bob Sawyer, was let go after causing friction between Murray and Wilcock – obliging Harris to fire both men, a surprising revelation for anyone familiar with the former’s subsequent long tenure in the band. It got worse: a single gig in November 1977 with Tony Moore on keyboards, Terry Wrapram on guitar, and drummer Barry Purkis (who later renamed himself Thunderstick for a job in Samson), led to Harris sacking the whole band. However, Harris was not keen to give up so easily and brought Murray back, as well as a new drummer, Doug Sampson, and a new frontman named Paul DiAnno. The latter gave the band a new edge, 11


with his punk-influenced look and sound: he later fronted the band for their first significant taste of success. The new line-up – DiAnno, Harris, Murray and Sampson – then recorded a demo, the nowlegendary The Soundhouse Tapes. This 1978 demo featured three songs and sold out its run of 5000 copies in a matter of weeks, most of which were snapped up by the rabid East End following that the band had amassed in previous months. As Steve told writer John Stix: ‘Prowler is a very special song for us. When we made the Soundhouse Tapes we took the actual tape to Neal Kay who was a DJ in north London. He used to have a heavy metal chart which was compiled from record requests and printed in the music magazine Sounds. Prowler got to be No.1 just from the requests for the demo tape. That’s why we had the tape made into a record, because so many kids were asking us how they could get hold of the demo tapes… The Soundhouse Tapes were the very first thing we recorded. It was just a demo. It only cost us about $400 to make the whole thing. It really wasn’t great quality.’ Of The Soundhouse Tapes, Murray said: ‘Well, that was [financed] between two guys in the band, really. We were working at the time, doing day jobs. We were always putting money back into the band, as far as getting equipment and petrol. You gotta pay to play nowadays. You always had to, really, especially in the early days. So, we just self-financed it really… We couldn’t actually afford to buy the master tapes, which would have been nice to have now. We just scraped up enough money to do the recording. But, to actually buy the reel of tape would’ve cost more and we couldn’t afford that. So, unfortunately that’s gone… They just re-recorded over it, the next band that goes in. Unfortunately, it’s gone to magnetic heaven… we only had 5000 made up, and gave a lot of them away. It was more of a promotion thing really. I gather they’re very hard to get hold of and are going for $300-$400.’ Championed by the heavy metal DJ Neal Kay, Maiden hit the top of Sounds magazine’s Heavy Metal Soundhouse Chart with the song 12


Prowler, as well as scoring two songs (Sanctuary and Wrathchild) on the seminal 1980 NWOBHM compilation Metal for Muthas. It wasn’t long before Steve’s amazing bass technique was noted by the musicians’ community. He later said of this: ‘I do get a lot of people saying that I’ve influenced them, which obviously is very flattering. But, the truth is, I’m really more interested in trying to write great songs. Maybe it’s because I’m a bass player and I write a lot of the music. I grew up listening to a lot of different bass players like Chris Squire and John Entwistle. Also, Martin Turner from Wishbone Ash and Rinus Gerritsen from Golden Earring were both a very big influence on me. If you listen to some early Golden Earring records, you can really hear the influence!’ He said of his playing style: ‘I play a lot of bass chords and stuff. I’m not too analytical about my own playing, I just write the songs. I’m more concerned with what’s good for the song than with what I’m playing. Which is probably why I’ve been playing less of a role lately, because that’s the way the songwriting has been. That’s what’s needed. The songwriting always depends on what’s needed or not needed.’ Of his writing style, Harris explained: ‘Some [songs] I write with a main bass riff and work out the melody on top of it. Some songs begin with a strong melody line and I work out the music behind it. I pretty much work everything out on the bass, the actual riffs and the harmonies. Running Free came together when I put a riff to the main drum beat by Doug Sampson.’ Maiden appeared not to take the NWOBHM tag too seriously, with future singer Bruce Dickinson commenting later: ‘It’s not a movement. It was almost as if in 1977, suddenly from nowhere like spontaneous generation, all these bands suddenly appeared like locusts. And it isn’t like that at all. There have always been heavy metal bands. There are still as many up-and-coming heavy metal bands in England as there ever were, when Iron Maiden and Samson, and Saxon and all those bands came up. The difference is there just 13


Iron Maiden onstage in1981 during the Killers World Tour. Paul Di’Anno, seen beside bassist Steve Harris, was the first vocalist to record with the band, appearing on Iron Maiden’s first two studio albums, 1980’s Iron Maiden and 1981’s Killers.

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aren’t as many record companies interested or prepared to take the new wave tag because record companies had a pretty easy time with new wave. All they had to do was make records cheaply – because the bands in most cases couldn’t play too good, and really didn’t care about playing much anyway – stick them in the back of a Transit and send them off to Sweden, and that was new wave. All very anarchistic and revolutionary… But unfortunately a lot of record companies went round signing heavy rock acts in exactly the same way, just throwing shit at the wall and hoping some of it sticks. Because it actually does cost a certain amount of money to support a heavy rock band on the road, because they tend to do things slightly different to a new wave band. A lot of bands – not us – just wanted to get an album out because they were convinced, no matter what the record company was like, they could set the world on fire.’ Steve’s down-to-earth attitude has always propelled the band, not least when he is asked about the band’s future: ‘You can’t really say what’s going to happen. I take each month or whatever as it comes. Y’ know, I just want to play for as long as possible onstage. I want to go to different countries and play to different audiences. So basically I’m having a good time at the moment and I want to have a good time for as long as possible, and I don’t want to think about the day when I’m going to have to think about something else… It is similar to a football thing. You know that at thirty-two you’re going to have to give it up… Y’ know, I don’t really regret that I didn’t make it as a footballer. I couldn’t really be dedicated to it. Because when I went round to West Ham, my favourite team, it’s all I ever wanted to play for, and when I got down there I found that it wasn’t really what I thought it was. You know what I mean? I didn’t want to go to bed at ten o’clock in the evening. I was at that age when I wanted to go out and have a few beers and meet a few women and that.’ Of the old NWOBHM days, Steve recalled to Shockwaves: “There was a bit of a buzz about us at the time. There were actually a few companies who came out to see us; in fact, I think we got turned 16


down by CBS and A&M. Even though we were playing pubs at the time, we had all these fans from the East London area who would follow us around all over the place. When we would play in East London, none of the record companies would come out to see us, they only hung out in central and West London. East London was like the wilderness, so they would never venture over there… Motörhead were already fairly well received by that time and were headlining venues. We actually did a couple of support gigs with them. We weren’t really aware of this movement that was happening until the press started getting hold of it. There were bands up North like Saxon, in Yorkshire, and there was Witchfynde, as well. So, there were all these bands happening all over England during that same time and I don’t think anyone was really aware of it until the press started writing about it, and that pretty much started that whole movement.” After handling all guitar duties for almost two years, Murray was joined by a sequence of temporary axemen, starting with Paul Cairns in 1979. Of songwriting and guitar playing, Murray once advised: ‘Don’t try and play a million notes. Playing one or two notes with feeling is a lot better than going crazy sometimes, you know? I think, as well, just play with melody. I’ve done the same thing, when I first started playing I’d sit down and listen to stuff and I’d nick ideas, but the more you’re playing the more you’re developing your own kind of style, so I think if you play for fun and enjoy yourself… you make an album and you kind of listen to it and play it over and over, then you tend to let it go and you move onto the next thing. If we’re going to be doing a song for a tour that we haven’t played for many years, you have to sit down and re-learn it. It comes back because it comes there subconsciously, but you have to sit there and re-learn some of those notes again, but it happens once or twice and I think it’s a good thing actually… we’re proud of everything we’ve done in the past and when we do an album we want to put 150% into it, so when you listen to an album a few 17


years back and think, oh yeah that sounds good, then you know you must’ve been doing the right thing at that time.’ Dennis Stratton was more successful, he was recruited despite the band wanting to hire Murray’s friend Adrian Smith (Smith had his own band, Urchin, at the time). At this point Sampson was also replaced by Clive Burr, who was introduced into Maiden by Stratton. All this activity led to a major coup in December 1979 when they signed a deal with EMI, assisted by the efforts of their new manager, Rod Smallwood (who they laughingly nicknamed ‘Smallwallet’ for his penny-pinching ways). The fanbase, which had grown thanks to the scintillating shows Maiden performed (aided by a stage mascot called Eddie, whose face was based on a decaying death-mask seen in a picture of the Vietnam War) and rejoiced in the deal with EMI. Of the recording process, Dave Murray once explained: ‘We go in there and it’s kind of like a football team or something. You all plan together, you want to make it work or whatever, and you want to work on the details and I think that’s what’s important. We work on the small stuff as well as the big stuff… then you’ve got Bruce singing, you’ve got all the melody and stuff, it’s just making a lot of musical statements by Maiden. There’s a lot of depth to Maiden and it’s the sort of [music] that is probably going to take you a few times to listen to it to really get into it, so there’s a lot going on. I think it’s great because you can play it over and over and you’ll hear different things every time you play it, there will be more stuff you didn’t hear the first time round.’ To many observers’ surprise, the eponymous debut album went all the way to No. 4 in the UK, despite heavy metal’s supposedly lowly stance when ranged against the likes of new wave and disco. This rise to glory did not go unnoticed by the elite of journalism, who often seemed keen to see Maiden fail. Asked by Sylvie Simmons at Creem if the band had lost its edge, Bruce retorted: ‘I don’t think we have, and I don’t think we ever will lose it, as long as we keep on with the same attitude which we’ve had, which is “Go out and go for it.” That’s 18


what got us the cult following, in the same way that I think AC/DC went out and got that cult following with Bon Scott. Because when you went to see an AC/DC show, whatever else you got, you always got 100% from the band. And you always got lots of blood and lots of sweat and everything, and that’s what you still get if you go to see an Iron Maiden show… If you go in with the attitude that the thing is just a job, then of course it will become a job, and you go onstage with all the inspiration of a plumber’s mate, or something like that.’ After the band had built up a reputation for their huge shows, there was no turning back, as the singer said: ‘There really wasn’t any alternative, because there was no way we were going to pick up radio airplay. We do now – but that’s because of the touring. We haven’t changed our style to fit American radio; American radio has come to us and said, we feel we’ve got to play you because when we open the phone lines for requests, all we get is abuse because we’re not playing Iron Maiden. They don’t really want to play the band, but they’ve got to, because there’s so many people they can’t ignore it. I think that’s a very healthy situation… See, press and people like that in general misunderstood the whole thing that is heavy rock. They don’t comprehend the extent of the dedication of not only the band themselves, but usually the fans that go with the band. To them, pop music means disposable music which sells disposable articles. As far as we’re concerned, our music isn’t disposable music which sells disposable articles. As far as we’re concerned, our music isn’t disposable, it isn’t designed to sell anything, and all we ask is that people listen to it and enjoy it… This is something I’ve been doing since I was thirteen years old, since I first listened to Deep Purple’s In Rock – that was the record that got me involved in rock music, full stop. And ever since that age, I’ve been involved in some way – for the first three or four years listening to it, and then getting around to trying to play something. It’s not like I suddenly discovered something new in my life: “Aha! A cause! A movement!” It’s always been part of my life, and I think heavy rock is part of a lot of people’s 19


Paul Di’Anno and Steve Harris onstage in 1980. ‘We built up a hardcore following, but we were really still semi-pro, gigging over long weekends and the like. So, after EMI signed us, we packed in the day jobs because we had to make an album.’ – Steve Harris

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lives. Because everything is getting more disposable and more plastic and more throwaway every second. In that way we’re a bit of an anachronism, really.’ By 1980 the New Wave of Heavy Metal was a recognised phenomenon in the press and the boardroom alike, with record companies snapping up Maiden’s contemporaries in an effort to emulate their money-generating success. The band themselves made history by touring the USA in support of Kiss, who at the time were enjoying critical adulation with their Unmasked Tour after a couple of years in the doldrums. Further dates in support of Judas Priest saw the band’s profile elevated still further, unhindered by the replacement of Stratton with Smith, who had been the target for recruitment all along. The Smith and Murray guitar recipe was the key to the early Maiden sound, alongside Harris’ penetrating fingerstyle bass and DiAnno’s semi-melodic, semi-staccato bark. Of the music itself, Bruce mused: “The intensity that people put into music has been the same since the year dot. There’s no dilution of intensity in what we do. There’s the same kind of intensity in what we do as there would have been in the music some medieval lute player did in the court of King Ned. He really gets into it and everyone goes, “Yeah! What a raving lute player!” Y’know, and he smashes his lute up at the end of every gig or something. That kind of intensity has always attracted people and galvanised them. It’s an intensity that there is in heavy metal and yet it’s always fucking clobbered. Nothing else is clobbered like heavy metal… I would describe our music as being anything but bland. You put an Iron Maiden album on the turntables and watch your fucking mother-in-law drop the dishes or something. It’s not bland at all; it sticks out like a sore thumb.’ Steve explained of the subject matter: ‘Well, we don’t deal with all the experiences that we have in life, we don’t sing about everything that we go through. There’s lots of different things that I’m into that I don’t particularly want to write about. I’m into football, but I don’t want to write a song about it. I might one day, if I get the inspiration 21


to write about football, y’know, or about anything. A lot of it is a fantasy thing. Y’know what I mean? People get a bit fed up with having politics rammed down their throats… people have said to us, y’know, you’re a working class band, why don’t you write about where you come from? And about politics and that, and how hard done by you were and all that business, but y’know, we don’t want to… all the films that are successful at the moment are talking of the unknown things that people don’t quite know about. Like 666 and all that, that’s just one song, there are other songs that deal with reincarnation and things, y’know.’

~ IRON MAIDEN

Released 14 April 1980 Tracklisting: Prowler / Remember Tomorrow / Running Free / Phantom of the Opera / Transylvania / Strange World / Charlotte the Harlot / Iron Maiden

Prowler ★★★ The immortal gambit may sound a little worn after so many years, but it still epitomises the raw and aggressive sound of the then-really ‘new’ New Wave of British Heavy Metal as much or better than many other classic songs of its era. Remember Tomorrow ★★ ‘Tears for remembrance and tears for joy’, sings DiAnno on this underrated album track, on which the band do their best to sound profound. Running Free ★★★★ From its classic Harris bass intro to the ridiculously over-the-top youth-gone-wild lyrics and Paul DiAnno’s untamed bark, Running 22


Free is one song which all youthful metal fans (no matter what age nowadays) will recall as a genre- and epoch-defining moment. Genius, in a simple way, even if it didn’t betray the slightest hint of the epic musical progression to come. Phantom of the Opera ★★★★ Among the first ever ambitious, extended epics which Steve and his band of merry men ever wrote, Phantom of the Opera remains remarkably fresh-sounding despite its vintage. It’s also one of the few songs which make it apparent that DiAnno could really sing when he wanted to: listen out for his vibrato, for example – wielded well rather than laboriously. There’s a gorgeous bass solo moment, composed of tricky triads, and some simple power-chord arpeggios that are all the more devastating for their simplicity. This song has something for everyone, not least its thundering central riff (the Maiden ‘gallop’ in essence), which made it perfect for sound-tracking a Lucozade commercial. Transylvania ★★ An instrumental on which – even in these early days – the band sound pretty dexterous, Transylvania is far from the vampire epic you’d think it was from the title. A shame, really… Strange World ★★★ If Steve Harris’ lyrics came primarily from nightmares (as Bruce has mentioned a few times), then Strange World must have come from a very pleasant dream indeed. It’s completely idyllic… Charlotte the Harlot ★★★ ‘Taking so many men to your room, don’t you feel no remorse?’ inquires DiAnno in a lyric that is less Harrisian poetry than pub banter. Still, Charlotte has gone down (ahem) in history as a metal icon, right up there with Eddie. 23


Iron Maiden ★★★ A classic title song (like Motörhead’s Motörhead come to think of it), Iron Maiden is simple but effective – the urban tale of the woman who ‘can’t be fought, can’t be sought’. CONCL USION Iron Maiden isn’t a perfect album, but then how many debut albums – from metal bands or otherwise – are? What the record does do with great ease is demonstrate the vast potential of this as yet untried band, with their nascent virtuosity still yet to evolve fully. Overall rating ★★★

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KILLERS

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he second album – 1981’s Killers – was another step forward, with the band mostly eschewing the punk stylings of the debut for a more polished approach that saw the beginnings of Harris’ career-long penchant for long, epic songs. The tour that followed it was characterised by the band’s relatively debauched off-stage antics, although – unlike many acts of their age, ilk and era – they never indulged much in drugs, preferring a few pints to the ubiquitous cocaine of the day. Nonetheless, DiAnno took it too far, drinking too much and becoming unreliable as a result. With his vocals and performances suffering to unacceptable levels, Harris asked him to leave. At the end of 1981 DiAnno’s replacement was drafted in. Bruce Dickinson, then as now a key mover on the British metal scene, was completely different to his predecessor. His voice was a spiralling, über-melodic thing of beauty – inspiring literally hundreds of power metal vocalists in the following decade – and he was an educated 25


product of the middle class, literate and articulate in a way that DiAnno had never been. Dickinson had attended a public school, Oundle, near Northampton, saying: ‘That was a classic case of parents wanting their kids to have everything they never had… Some of it was good, loads to do, amateur dramatics, debating, but really it was the most illiberal place on the planet. Wacko! Mass floggings over minor practical jokes. Eventually I was expelled for pissing in the headmaster’s dinner. Somebody informed on me. It was only half a cupful slipped into the frozen beans, and I knew from biology a bit of boiled urine wouldn’t do him any harm. Ill-judged, though, I admit.’ Dickinson brought the right influences to Maiden, as he said: ‘I’m still a Ritchie Blackmore fan. I love watching the guy. I think he’s miles away from what he was doing in Deep Purple, but then that’s understandable because that was twelve years ago and the guy gets older and wants to move on and do different things. I remember when I was fourteen or fifteen, that one particular album, Made in Japan, made a really profound impression on me. Really profound. I used to just sit and listen to it over and over again. I used to know the whole thing note perfect – every drum beat, everything. Like the first couple of Sabbath albums, and Jethro Tull’s Aqualung, and Arthur Brown, would you believe – great… My favourite bands all come from the 1969 to 1975 period really; not a lot after that. But really, it’s not so much whether it’s new or old, it’s the quality. In the old days bands were less prepared to compromise – that’s not true actually, plenty of bands compromised, but bands that didn’t always ended up being our firm favourites. Bands like Purple. It’s that attitude, I think, that inspired me to get into rock music. And unless I see that sort of magic coming from a band when you see it live, then I’m not really interested, no matter how pro or note-perfect. If somebody has got inside your head and motivated you, you go away thinking, now let’s go and rip off whatever they did!’ 26


He added: ‘I still read Biggles books – it’s great, picturing yourself in the cockpit, big scarf sticking out and everything. It’s fun… there is a slightly more serious side, but everything is treated with a certain amount of humour. Within the band we do have a strong sense of humour about what we do, although we do take it seriously. I think there’s a lot of humour in life, and I think that’s fairly accurately represented. We have a very black sense of humour, hence the album covers. We watch Halloween and Poltergeist and things like that.’ As he told the NME in 1988, his musical education started at the beginning of the seventies: ‘The first Black Sabbath album had come out and there were a lot of very heavy art-rock bands about, playing the kind of music that Wagner might have played. I’d just got hold of a copy of Deep Purple In Rock and Aqualung, so there didn’t seem to be any alternative. Pop was really crass at that time, all the Bay City Rollers stuff, and jazz rock was very boring, everyone going “boooooooing” on bass… Then there was T. Rex and Bowie and I couldn’t stand either of them. I don’t like the singing; I couldn’t stand singers who whined. I remember hearing All the Young Dudes. I could never stand Mott The Hoople… I was into the blues but I wasn’t infatuated the way Led Zeppelin were. I always thought Led Zeppelin were terribly overrated, like Jimi Hendrix, who made a few revolutionary tracks and a lot of shit. Deep Purple was what really moved me. I’d never heard a band play with so much power, so loose and yet so ballsy… I wanted to be a drummer, not a singer. If it was a case of choosing between John Bonham, who went biff, bang, wallop or Ian Paice, who did thirty million drum rolls to a second, I wanted to be like Ian Paice. I ended up being a singer by accident. Basically I couldn’t afford a drum kit… Anyway, I decided I wanted a group with the lyrics of Van Der Graaf Generator, the playing and proficiency of Purple and the energy of punk. It was a pretty tall order for a bunch of university students, jumping around like punks, playing like Ritchie Blackmore and writing songs like Jethro Tull, but we had a shot at it.’ 27


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‘Everything you need to know about Iron Maiden is onstage.’ – Bruce Dickinson

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This willingness to experiment with multiple styles came to the fore in his lyrics, which explored new territory on later albums. Interestingly in retrospect, it emerged that the respected radio DJ Tommy Vance – whose judgement was usually spot-on in all other areas – advised Bruce not to join, reasoning that his band Samson had a greater chance of success. Fortunately for band and fanbase, Dickinson ignored him and went on to sing on 1982’s fantastic The Number of the Beast, which was a step up on all levels.

~ KILLERS

Released 2 February 1981 Tracklisting: The Ides of March / Wrathchild / Murders in the Rue Morgue / Another Life / Genghis Khan / Innocent Exile / Killers / Prodigal Son / Purgatory / Drifter

THE IDES OF MARCH ★★★ Another skillfully-executed instrumental from the East End NWOBHM posse, The Ides of March doesn’t bear any resemblance to its title but does sound suitably ominous in parts. WRATHCHILD ★★★ A classic Maiden song from this early stage and one which gave its name to an unfortunate set of hair-metal gimps on both sides of the Atlantic… but that’s not Iron Maiden’s fault. MURDERS IN THE RUE MORGUE ★★★ ‘Someone called the gendarmes!’ This particular piece of trickery is among the first to be inspired by the world of classical literature.

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ANOTHER LI FE ★★ Another song in which DiAnno sings of lying on his bed, Another Life is a short, interesting album filler. GENGHIS KHAN ★★ The mighty Asiatic serial killer would no doubt have been highly complimented to learn that 754 years after his death, a British heavy metal band would write a song about him. INNOCENT EXILE ★★ There’s no mystery here – Innocent Exile is a song about a man who’s innocent and he’s in exile. You see? It’s not complicated stuff, this. Not yet, anyway. KILLERS ★★ A reasonably detailed tale of taking somebody’s life and then worrying about it quite a lot, Killers is a morality tale of sorts, complete with shouts of ‘Oh yeah!’ and attempts at demonic laughter. PRODIGAL SON ★★ ‘I’ve got this curse, I’m turning to bad!’ Whines DiAnno in this slightly obscure tale of a geezer sinking into depression. The music, though, is all Maiden – dexterous and ambitious. PURGATORY ★★ With its themes of levitation, spiritual elevation and general ambient weirdness, it seems that Steve had eaten too much Stilton before going to bed one night and writing Purgatory in the morning. DRI FTER ★★★ A positive song for a change, with the central narrator promising to hold his lover (or child) securely, Drifter is a great way to round off the album. 31


CONCL USION Killers stepped up a notch from the youthful extravagance of Iron Maiden, but it wasn’t until the advanced excellence of The Number of the Beast that Steve Harris and Iron Maiden really found their identity as songwriters or musicians. With that in mind, Killers should really be seen as part two of the two-part Paul DiAnno saga: a reflection of his adequate, rather than excellent, skills, and a souvenir of a fun but unsophisticated era that had no real place on the British music scene after about 1982. Overall rating ★★★

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THE NUMBER OF THE BEAST

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hen The Number of the Beast was released, its frankly terrifying cover art – a pièce de résistance from the band’s long-time sleeve artist of choice, Derek Riggs – identified it and its creators as one of the most important metal phenomena ever. The lead single, Run to the Hills, was a huge hit, as was the album itself, which entered the Top 10 of many countries despite right-wing pressure groups in America protesting against the supposedly satanic music and art. Fuel was added to the fire by tales such as that of producer Martin Birch, who damaged his car in a crash and was presented with a bill for – wait for it – £666. When asked by Paul Morley of the NME in 1982 if the image of the band was as important as the music itself, Dickinson mused: ‘I think you could be right. I think there is more to the actual music side than that. As far as the overall image goes, the way Eddie is related to Iron Maiden, there may be a lot of truth in what you say. Oh, sure, he’s definitely larger than life, but in other ways he’s very 33


much tongue-in-cheek. He’s not to be taken deadly serious. People can find some fucking serious grief about Eddie, saying that he’s real horrible, but it’s no way that it’s anything other than a good laugh… There’s a lot of humour about us, put it that way. We try and debunk a lot of your standard heavy rock poses. We do a bit of it ourselves but at the same time we take the piss out of it… because we’re human beings and we don’t take the whole of life completely, stupidly seriously, and all we want to get over is that we’re just normal guys out for a good time. I think that the music stands up on its own, but there is no reason why you shouldn’t give a show that is a good laugh… I suppose [fans] want to see people who can play, they respect certain values like professionalism, and they don’t want to be treated like shit. They pay good money and they look forward to seeing some good music being played by decent musicians who really put their soul into it. If a pile of shit walks on, well, they’ll soon let you know if they don’t like it. You can’t get away with just farting.’

~ THE NUMBER OF THE BEAST

Released 22 March 1982

Tracklisting: Invaders / Children of the Damned / The Prisoner / 22 Acacia Avenue / The Number of the Beast / Run to the Hills / Gangland / Hallowed Be Thy Name

INVADERS ★★★ With its mentions of ‘Nordic fighting men’ and longboats, it’s clear that The Number of the Beast’s opening track is not going to be about market gardening – it’s about war! CHILDREN OF THE DAMNED ★★★ A Revelations-style elegy about a kid whose face peels off – had Steve 34


been watching The Omen? – Children of the Damned is still a classic after all these (wasted) years. THE PRISONER ★★★★ A classic through and through, even without McGoohan’s introduction. The Prisoner remains one of those songs that you have to know inside out if you want to call yourself an Iron Maiden fan. 22 ACACIA AVENUE ★★★ It’s Charlotte the Harlot again, not having a good time as Bruce sings about her multiple abuses at the hands of evil clients. Still, it works out fine – she is rescued at the song’s end. THE NUMBER OF THE BEAST ★★★★ The best song Iron Maiden had written in a while thanks to that insistent guitar drone and vocal melody that wouldn’t quit, the album’s title track is sophisticated from such a young band. RUN TO THE HILLS ★★★★ A great song, more akin to a pop tune than a metal anthem (although it’s both, of course), Run to the Hills is responsible for the ascent of Iron Maiden. Without it, their climb to prominence would have been much slower. GANGLAND ★★ Contract killings, jailbirds, Adrian Smith co-writing credits – yes, Gangland was pretty juvenile. Not that this would have mattered if it had been as gripping as Run to the Hills… HALLOWED BE THY NAME ★★★ Rhyming ‘error’ with ‘terror’, Hallowed Be Thy Name is the story of a bloke being marched out to the firing squad. It’s not pretty, but then it’s not supposed to be. 35


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‘Once you start out, you are kind of finding out who you are, and then by the time you get to the second album or you’ve been touring a lot, doing live shows or whatever, the sound starts to shift slightly to something that is more the true essence of what the band really is.’ – Steve Harris

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CONCL USION Although not every song on The Number of the Beast has ‘classic’ stamped on it, the album’s impact on the metal scene and its enduring presence – influencing countless Satanic bands (pseudo or otherwise) with its sleeve art and demonic lyrics – makes it one of the finest metal albums ever made. The outstanding songs – the title track, The Prisoner, Run to the Hills, Hallowed Be Thy Name – will endure for decades, even if tricks such as Patrick McGoohan’s introduction to The Prisoner and various other hokey elements have aged poorly in the interim. Overall rating ★★★★

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PIECE OF MIND

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nd so Maiden entered their period of greatest commercial power, going on to release four albums which both defined and evolved 1980s heavy metal. 1983’s Piece of Mind was the first, featuring the talents of ex-Trust drummer Nicko McBrain, who had replaced Burr. Unlike many drummers, Nicko avoided using double bass drum pedals, saying: ‘I find that using one is hard enough and I think that using two would be double trouble! It depends on what the bass line is laying down. The more intense it is, the more you have to play on the foot. It just comes from a lot of playing. One of the most important things to be aware of is your balance. By this I mean how you sit behind the kit in relation to the distance from the bass drum and the height from the floor. I sit very low and my upper leg is parallel to the floor. I only use the side of my big toe on the bass drum pedal. You should find what works best for you.’ Nicko explained: ‘My father played the trumpet and keyboard and my mum was into the piano, so there was always a heavy musical 39


element in my house growing up. I was eleven-years-old when I saw Joe Morello play a solo with his band in 1964. I knew straight away that was what I wanted to do. My family was totally supportive… I’m self taught, but I learnt from the best drummers in the world, by listening to what they played and took in as much as possible from them.’ Of the many fans of his drumming, McBrain opined: ‘I wouldn’t say that I’m proud, it’s more of an honour. It is very nice to know that people appreciate my playing. When I was a young boy I always wanted to do the best that I could and I guess that means, that when you have a passion for something, you give it all and you will eventually meet your dreams.’

~ PIECE OF MIND

Released 16 May 1983

Tracklisting: Where Eagles Dare / Revelations / Flight of Icarus / Die with Your Boots On / The Trooper / Still Life / Quest for Fire / Sun and Steel / To Tame a Land

WHERE EAGLES DARE ★★★ Blatantly pinching its theme from the film of the same name – weren’t Maiden quite the culture vultures, eh? Where Eagles Dare even locates its story of daring and intrigue in the Bavarian Alps, helpfully. REVELATIONS ★★★ Combining biblical exhortations with one part riffage and two parts earnest lyricism, Revelations shows that Maiden had deep things on their minds back in 1982. 40


FLIGHT OF ICARUS ★★ Literally the story of the flight of Icarus – who fashioned some wings of wax but fell to his doom after flying too close to the sun, implausibly – this song is worth your investigation, but only just. DIE WITH YOUR BOOTS ON ★★★ More horror stories from Revelations or the popular cinematic equivalent thereof, Die With Your Boots On – although its title makes it sound like a war anthem – is anything but. THE TROOPER ★★★★ The obvious classic on this slightly mixed-up album, The Trooper does what Maiden do best – sing about swashbuckling heroism and the horrors of warfare – in inimitable style, unforgettable lead riff and all. STILL LI FE ★★★ ‘I’ve no doubt that you think I’m off my head’, sings Bruce, doing well to get all that out and still pose on stage. The song is a strange one, perhaps in keeping with the theme of mental instability that pervades this album. QUEST FOR FIRE ★★ Cavemen trying to make fire? Perfect lyrical inspiration for a metal band, I’m sure you’ll agree – and in fact, it works more or less admirably. SUN AND STEEL ★★ The idea that a warrior lives life fully aware of his own death is one that inevitably crosses most head-bangers’ minds from time to time, not least due to this rather good song. TO TAME A LAND ★★★ Originally to be titled Dune after the sci-fi novel of the same name, 41


the lyrics of To Tame a Land will be instantly familiar to anyone who knows what ‘Kwisatz Haderach’ means. CONCL USION Piece of Mind has sterling cover art – Eddie, chained up in a mental institution’s padded cell, raving and frothing against the bonds that hold him – but doesn’t match this excellence in its grooves. There’s nothing particularly wrong with it, and in fact quite a few of the tunes have survived a couple of decades in the live set – but it doesn’t match up to the glories that followed or the sheer extravagance of the album which preceded it. Overall rating ★★★

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POWERSLAVE

T

he Powerslave album followed, including all-time Maiden classics such as 2 Minutes to Midnight, Aces High and Rime of the Ancient Mariner. With Dickinson and Harris – then as now the primary songwriters – exploring metal-friendly themes of warfare and fantasy literature, the albums were bought in their millions worldwide, and seized upon equally by fans in many countries, especially those where Maiden put on their electrifying live shows.

~ POWERSLAVE

Released 3 September 1984 Tracklisting: Aces High / 2 Minutes to Midnight / Losfer Words (Big ‘Orra) / Flash of the Blade / The Duellists / Back in the Village / Powerslave / Rime of the Ancient Mariner

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Bruce Dickinson joined Iron Maiden in 1982, replacing Paul Di’Anno, and debuted on their 1982 album The Number of the Beast. Dickinson quit Iron Maiden in 1993 (being replaced by Blaze Bayley) to pursue his solo career. He rejoined the band in 1999, along with guitarist Adrian Smith. In the subsequent years Iron Maiden have released five studio albums.

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ACES HIGH ★★★ Only someone with serious knowledge of WW2 air battles – ‘Ten ME-109s coming out of the sun!’ Could have written this sabrerattling tune. It’s rather good, too. 2 MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT ★★★★ A funny one, this. 2 Minutes to Midnight is a great song – I defy anyone not to emulate that full-throated wail on the chorus – but doesn’t let you know it until that selfsame chorus, as it begins with a slightly mundane monotone. Don’t worry, though – after the first minute it’s like coming home. Welcome to Maidenville. LOSFER WORDS ★★ Another Maiden album, another useful instrumental to calm the nerves before the big fighting songs recommence… FLASH OF THE BLADE ★★★ The smell of resined leather, the steely iron mask? Either Bruce was referring to his fencing skills (he was No. 7 in the UK rankings, you know) or a grisly death at the point of a sword: either way, it was stirring stuff. THE DUELLISTS ★★★★ More swordfighting with two aggrieved chaps taking it out on each other, The Duellists does the trick – of depicting old-school violence in an old-school metal way – with aplomb. BACK IN THE VILLAGE ★★★ Mental instability rears its head once more as the central character recalls seeing things no-one should see, back in a war-stricken village from which he has escaped. Grim stuff.

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POWERSLAVE ★★★ The epic tale of an Egyptian god whose death terrifies him, Powerslave ties in perfectly with Derek Riggs’ cover art of a huge, malevolent sphinx and powers down the album, segueing perfectly into… RIME OF THE ANCIENT MARINER ★★★ … a superbly self-indulgent bit of nonsense from team Harris, complete with a droning, trancey bass figure and sound effects nicked straight from Davy Jones’ locker. Who knows what the song is about, really, other than a slice of fantastical whimsy from someone (probably Bruce) who had been reading a bit of classical literature? CONCL USION Powerslave was and remains one of Iron Maiden’s finest albums, a synthesis of metallic swagger with the epic song themes and soundscapes which were rapidly becoming a key selling-point for the band. Harris was evolving well as a songwriter, most crucially, while Bruce was coming into his own as a lyricist and frontman to match any other. An early milestone in a long career littered with such milestones. Overall rating ★★★★★

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SOMEWHERE IN TIME

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aiden’s incredible live experience was next encapsulated in 1985’s double live album Live After Death (all metal fans have to have that poster on their wall!) And a more experimental, sci-fi focused album in 1986’s Somewhere in Time. Not that Maiden had an entirely free hand: wanting to record a song on the subject of the famous science-fiction novel Dune (and to include a spoken-word excerpt from it), Maiden received a refusal from the author Frank Herbert’s agent which ran: ‘Frank Herbert doesn’t like rock bands, particularly heavy rock bands, and especially rock bands like Iron Maiden.’ Murray told writer Gary James of a record-label switch: ‘I don’t really know the politics that goes down between the management and the record company. We get on with the music and let them deal with the business side of it. CMC is a really good label. They’re really looking after the band. They’re really into it. They’re very enthusiastic. You need somebody that’s gonna be behind you, and be 47


a team, and we’re playing on the same team. They’re an independent label, but they’re really pushing the band, and also releasing the back catalogue. Now everything we’ve ever recorded is on CMC. They’ve got everything we’ve ever actually put down on tape. They feel good about having us with them and we feel vice versa.’ Various concerned parents’ groups still warned of the dangers of listening to Maiden, of course. However, Maiden later mocked the idiotic Satanic controversy by including a ‘sinister’ reversed message on the song Still Life, which – when played backwards – was revealed to be McBrain doing an impression of Idi Amin, saying ‘Hmm, hmmm, what ho, sed de t’ing wid de t’ree bonce. Don’t meddle wid t’ings you don’t understand’ (‘What ho, said the monster with the three heads, don’t meddle with things you don’t understand’), followed by a burp. ‘I think it’s pathetic,’ said Bruce to Creem. ‘Water off a duck’s back, really. It was fun to play along with it a little bit last year, because the album was called Number of the Beast, and they seemed perfectly willing to give us oodles and oodles of cheap publicity. But I’m just fed up with it now. It’s boring, it’s tired, and I think even the ‘moral majority’ is getting fed up with it. You don’t need to play up to that sort of publicity. We’re quite capable of going out and entertaining people live without having to go out and seek cheap publicity… Journalists are journalists because they write words better than they write music, so consequently they don’t understand that the reading of rock lyrics is not reading poetry. Rock lyrics are designed to be sung. I mean, ‘wopbopa loobop a lop bam boom, got a girl named Daisy who’s driving me crazy’ – it sounds great when Little Richard is singing it, doesn’t it, know what I mean? So I don’t think you can really knock lyrics. If the cap fits, wear it. The bottom line is if they sound OK when they’re sung. I will admit that there are a couple of lines on this album that we thought were real funny at the time, but we kept them in because we didn’t want to go through the grief of arguing about it. So we kept them in and we all go ‘ooooofff!’ 48


Of his entry into the band, Dickinson explained: ‘When I first joined Iron Maiden it was already locked into a grand guignol style, which mainly comes from Steve and these traumatic nightmares he had. He never tells anyone about them, he doesn’t like to go into it, but obviously that’s why a lot of his songs follow those themes. Though not so much any more I don’t think, I gather he has a slightly more peaceful night’s sleep these days. Over the years he’s done sixty to seventy percent of the lyrics, the rest are mine, and that’s about the mix between shock-horror and other topics… What I do is the big melodramatic bit, mock-opera style – opera with razor blades. You can get away with those lyrics that way, it doesn’t sound too crazy. Mind you, once in a while I have said, come on, you’ve gotta be joking! I remember once he came along and said, here’s one: ‘In a time when dinosaurs walked the earth/In a land where swamps and caves were home’ – all this to a merry Irish jig rhythm with these octave leaps in the middle. I thought, “Bloody hell!” But I did it more to prove it could be done than anything else.’ Of the use of new sounds, Murray explained, ‘We’d use anything, if it sounds good we’d use it. It just seems having the orchestration and using the keyboards and synths to do that it just makes it sound bigger and fatter and gives a more dynamic sound to it all, but if you strip everything away, the songs are strong enough to stand out by themselves. You just want to enhance a piece of music and make it sound the best it can sound, so if you want to use keys to add a particular effect to a song, I think it’s good! To me there are no rules in music, if it sounds good to your ear and if it sounds good musically, you can use a set of bagpipes if you want, whatever makes that song sound its best…’

~

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Guitarist Dave Murray onstage. ‘A band is sort of like a star – it reaches a peak and burns out. To have five guys working in perfect harmony longer than a couple years is difficult.’ – Adrian Smith

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SOMEWHERE IN TIME Released 29 September 1986

Tracklisting: Caught Somewhere in Time / Wasted Years / Sea of Madness / Heaven Can Wait / The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner / Stranger in a Strange Land / Deja-Vu / Alexander the Great

CAUGHT SOMEWHERE IN TIME ★★★ The theme of time passing and standing still is explored fully in this subtle song, executed with precision by a band now fully in control of their tools and rewarded with a budget to match. WASTED YEARS ★★★ The tale of a heartbroken traveller wandering through what appears to be a nameless wasteland, Wasted Years is both thought-provoking and deep. Good stuff by main composer Smith. SEA OF MADNESS ★★ Rhyming ‘sadness’ with ‘madness’ and containing a lyric mostly about those exact subjects, Sea of Madness appears to be one of the most profound songs Maiden have yet written. HEAVEN CAN WAIT ★★★ ‘Is this in limbo or heaven or hell?’ inquires Bruce through a sea of riffs and atmospherics, continuing the album’s theme of confusion and spiritual removal. The film of the same name undoubtedly helped boost awareness of the song. THE LONELINESS OF THE LONG DISTANCE RUNNER ★★★ Evoking the misery of anyone running a long race when they don’t have the motivation to win it, this song is an interesting subject for a metal band (read: bizarre). But it works nonetheless.

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STRANGER IN A STRANGE LAND ★★★ One of the better-known Maiden songs from the era, Stranger in a Strange Land may or may not be inspired by the famous Robert Heinlein novel of the 1960s. In either case it’s still a lengthy, atmospheric piece of composition. DEJA-VU ★★ ‘Feel like I’ve been here before!’ chants Dickinson through this slight, self-explanatory bit of filler. ALEXANDER THE GREAT ★★★★ Reading like a simple history lesson but injecting enough metal humour into its subject for credibility, this study of the famous Macedonian king is an epic way to finish the album. CONCL USION Somewhere in Time is firstly a massive album because of its incredible artwork, of course. Getting past the cover – which shows Eddie as a bizarre cyborg hybrid of Clint Eastwood and the Terminator, amid a futuristic urban cityscape reminiscent of Blade Runner (but with very British wit, such as a digital clock showing the time 11:58… two minutes to midnight, right?) – is an effort in itself. The music, though, is of course worth the effort, as is every album from this golden era of Maiden’s career. Huge fantastical themes abound (and would reach their logical conclusion on their next album, as we know) as well as a crisp production and some experimental touches that work perfectly. Somewhere in Time is often overshadowed by the vast Seventh Son of a Seventh Son, which is a shame. Overall rating ★★★★

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SEVENTH SON OF A SEVENTH SON

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he new, slightly experimental approach of Somewhere in Time – which had featured keyboards and guitar synths – had obviously not put off the Maiden fanbase, so the band took the approach a step further on what is regarded by some as the finest (if also most commercial) album of their career to date, Seventh Son of a Seventh Son. A concept album about a child with second sight who must steer clear of hellfire and other unpleasant fates, the record was supported by a triumphant performance at 1988’s Castle Donington festival (although the show itself was marred by the deaths of two fans, crushed during an earlier set by Guns N’ Roses). In 1990’s Guinness Book of Records the show was cited as the loudest gig ever played. It was a mighty show. ‘I’m an entertainer,’ said Bruce once. ‘I feel more like some sort of bizarre juggler… We’re just there to see that it reaches a climax at the right moment. Ceremony as a release is used 53


all over the place, whether it’s formal or informal. A football match is a ceremony of release. The key is to defuse it, so that people can tell the difference between the ritual and reality. The ritual releases feelings that, if put into practice in the modern world, would end up killing them. Songs like 2 Minutes to Midnight are about that bit inside you that actually wants to be in a gunship in Nam, hosing down all those gooks… Some thrash metal bands seem to have a bit of a problem with it, but I assume it’s tongue-in-cheek, as I’ve met them, and they’re the most mild-mannered people around. I don’t think the imagery is such a problem. I mean gory imagery for sensationalism’s sake has been around for a long time, back as far as Grand Guignol theatre and stuff like that… when the music gets disruptive and dangerous, the only people it’s usually dangerous for is the audience. Joe Soap can get onstage and say “Let’s trash this place dudes!” But he’s not the one who’s gonna get his head caved in and spend the night in a cell.’ Of the intense stage show, Bruce once explained: ‘It’s like you’re building yourself up all day and then just letting it all go during that two hours. You have to visualise what’s happening… I shut my eyes and think of the people in the audience and it’s like a huge sea and the waves come rolling over you and you’re part of it, and it’s like you’re part of this huge great thing. You can call me an old fucking hippy, I don’t care. The whole thing is just absolutely great. I suppose it’s like a meditation and it’s like when I’m singing and there are no distractions, there’s a little voice that you become aware of that’s singing along with you and you’re aware of the crowd…’ Occasionally gigs got a bit too violent. Of one gig in Paris, Bruce told Q in 1991: ‘Moshing is dangerous and it really pisses me off… There were fifteen people down the front absolutely hell-bent on beating the crap out of anyone who didn’t want to join in. I’m talking about huge skinheads hurling themselves at whoever’s in the way, boy or girl. People were getting hurt. My whole thing with rock, especially heavy metal, is that despite the musical aggression, the 54


feeling is always of comradeship, people looking after one another, because you’re all into the same bands and it doesn’t matter whether you’re rich or poor, thick or the brain of Britain. This moshing thing is really egocentric and it screws the show up for everybody.’

~ Seventh Son of a Seventh Son

Released 11 April 1988

Tracklisting: Moonchild / Infinite Dreams / Can I Play with Madness / The Evil That Men Do / Seventh Son of a Seventh Son / The Prophecy / The Clairvoyant / Only the Good Die Young

MOONCHILD ★★★ Introducing the theme of the doomed central character, Moonchild takes the form of a malevolent deity sentencing his spirit to a life which is, shall we say, challenging. IN FINITE DREAMS ★★★ A mellow tune for such an early point in this album, Infinite Dreams showcased the progress of the central concept character out of his childhood and towards the big fat single of Can I Play With Madness. A keyboard wash – one of many on this atmosphere-heavy album – is heard and the riffage never really takes off, which is understandable given the song which follows it. CAN I PLAY WITH MADNESS ★★★★★ Fans’ jaws dropped when they first heard Can I Play With Madness. Long-standing listeners were in awe of its simple, two-part harmony chorus – as with so many Maiden songs, also the track title – and the crisp, galloping riff that sat at its core. The mid-section, too, was a Harris-penned classic, initiated by a time change that took most people by surprise. Surprisingly, from this era of intense shredding 55


‘Rock music should be gross: that’s the fun of it. It gets up and drops its trousers.’ – Bruce Dickinson

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solos, the guitar leads are weak and understated, perhaps deliberately so to facilitate airplay on pop stations. A breakdown to the a-cappella chorus is a masterstroke, as is the sudden ending. On the other hand, Can I Play With Madness was a very commercial tune, which took a lot of people by surprise. Some fans were even up in arms, claiming that the band had made a cynical attempt to storm mainstream radio – and if this was the case, it worked admirably. As with all fans who see ‘their’ band embraced by the masses, there was more than a little jealousy and resentment. All of which makes Can I Play With Madnessone of the most controversial, and enjoyable, songs Maiden have ever recorded. THE EVIL THAT MEN DO ★★ A logical successor to Can I Play With Madness, but not quite as alluring or simple as that song, The Evil That Men Do nailed that not particularly catchy phrase to a song of more or less standard quality. A slightly darker, less accessible outing for the pipes of Dickinson and the riffs of Murray and Smith, the song relieved those Maiden fans who had feared that the band might be heading uncontrollably into commercial territory. SEVENTH SON OF A SEVENTH SON ★★ Repeating the number seven ad infinitum, the message that this is a concept album and Maiden’s seventh studio LP, the album’s title track is not for the faint-hearted. THE PROPHECY ★★ A frankly depressing moment in which the key character realises how pointless everything is (‘and now it’s too late…’), the song is almost the end of the line for Seventh Son. THE CLAIRVOYANT ★★ There’s time to live and there’s time to die, quoth the clairvoyant on 57


this penultimate track. A good song it may be, but the album isn’t going to end well… ONLY THE GOOD DIE YOUNG ★★★ It’s goodbye to our central character and a portentous exposition of the nature of religion, as Only the Good Die Young winds Seventh Son down with neither a bang nor a whimper, but a wail of guitars and vocal cords. CONCL USION What an album, despite its ostentatious nature. Seventh Son of a Seventh Son remains to this day the point at which many fans departed their favourite band, as the next LP was quite a change of atmosphere. The 1980s, then, were Maiden’s decade. Remember them with this fantastic album. Overall rating ★★★★

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NO PRAYER FOR THE DYING

W

ith the end of the 1980s, Maiden fell into something of a critical and commercial rut from which it took them years to recover. Perhaps the large-scale desertion by metal fans to the new grunge and alternative rock scenes in the early 1990s had something to do with it, or maybe the band’s records just sounded a little old hat in the new, self-aware era of plaid shirts and angst. Whatever the cause, something about Maiden just sounded a little out of touch in the new decade. This wasn’t helped by the departure of Smith to his own band. As quickly as possible, he was replaced by Janick Gers of Gillan, who to this day is not quite the fan favourite that each member of the classic Dickinson/Murray/Smith/Harris/McBrain was in the 1980s, even though his musical skills have never been in doubt. Of his departure, Adrian said: ‘I had begun to get tired, bored, and really didn’t know what I wanted to do. I enjoy it more now, because I used to have no personal life. Balance is necessary, something that we didn’t have back then. When it is time for us to 59


work, we are all revitalised because we have the opportunity, outside of Iron Maiden, to follow our personal choices.’ Janick Gers had a distinguished past, explaining, ‘I got a phone call from [since-disgraced paedophile] Jonathan King who assembled [the band] Gogmagog around 1985. He liked my blues style kind of playing and thought that I would give them a good slack, and that’s what he thought it would mean, and… He wanted me to join the band with Neil Murray, Clive Burr, Paul DiAnno and Pete Willis who used to play with Def Leppard. So we got together and we did a session which we recorded and we put it out and it was quite a good fun thing actually… [Then Ian Gillan] rang me up one day and asked me to drive to London. I went to the Top of the Pops studio and… Bernie Tormé had just left the band, so I went down. I didn’t know any of the songs beforehand. I only knew that I would be playing at Top of the Pops and everything was new for me. The guys just told me basically: “Learn these songs for tomorrow”… so I went into my room and suddenly the tape ran out while I was learning them. Next day I said to them: “Sorry guys, I haven’t learnt the songs, my tape was running out.” And when we got on the stage, we did a one-hour sound check which was me learning the songs. And that was it. I personally think I played good enough that night, though… I played with Deep Purple a couple of months ago. I did a jam session together with them and that was great! I really like [Gillan]. He’s still a great singer. He, Plant and Paul Rodgers… they wrote the book of singing some time ago, you knew that?’ Gers and Dickinson went back a long way, as the former explained: ‘I met Bruce when I was in White Spirit. Bruce was in a private school and I was in a public school. My old band White Spirit and Samson were often playing in the same kind of places. We both came from the same genres and we had the same kind of backgrounds… I was playing football with [sometime Marillion singer] Fish and [Bruce] asked me to come to the gig to watch him, and he ran me 60


out and said he was looking for a player and I said OK. So, I got that gig and Bruce was doing that same gig as well and we met again in a few years and… Basically we hadn’t seen each other in a long time. I was recording a Bowie track All the Young Dudes. Tony Hadley from Spandau Ballet was originally supposed to sing the song, but he got sick at the last minute, so Bruce sang it. That’s how we got together. The rest is pretty much history…’ 1990’s No Prayer for the Dying saw Maiden return to an older, rawer style, moving away from the experimentation of the Seventh Son era – but to less critical acclaim than they would perhaps have expected. However, No Prayer did yield the band’s only UK charttopping single to date in Bring Your Daughter to the Slaughter.

~ NO PRAYER FOR THE DYING

Released 1 October 1990

Tracklisting: Tailgunner / Holy Smoke / No Prayer for the Dying / Public Enema Number One / Fates Warning / The Assassin / Run Silent Run Deep / Hooks in You / Bring Your Daughter… to the Slaughter / Mother Russia

TAILGUNNER ★★ Something of a treatise on the Dresden bombings of the Second World War, Tailgunner is more Biggles-style boy’s own stuff from Bruce – but this time with some genuine pathos on the subject. HOLY SMOKE ★★★ An excellent mickey-take out of religious televangelists, Holy Smoke takes an unusual stance of arch mockery and even a glee at the downfall of the fools who were condemning The Number of the Beast a few years before. 61


‘I feel like I’ve had a fantastic life and career with music, and I’ve worked very hard, but maybe I’ve had a bit of luck along the way.’ – Steve Harris

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NO PRAYER FOR THE DYING ★★ Ironically rather like a prayer itself, No Prayer is a dark, rather sad song that sees the narrator seated at a window and begging for help from above. Dark stuff. PUBLIC ENEMA NUMBER ONE ★★ Usually discounted because of its stupid title (comedy songs on B-sides, good; comedy songs on albums, bad. Bad, Steve, bad!), Public Enema Number One (you can just imagine the geezerish chuckles in the rehearsal room when they thought that one up, as well as the rationales of ‘Well, we gotta show people we got a sense of yumour, innit?’ This isn’t as bad as the name suggests, but it is ultimately skippable. FATES WARNING ★★★ ‘The worst is yet to come, a hell for mankind’ is the cheery conclusion of this depressing exposition on the state of the world and the fate of man. THE ASSASSIN ★★★ Another contract-killer fantasy designed to spook anyone under thirteen, The Assassin is a neatly-gauged run-through of nightmare violence. RUN SILENT RUN DEEP ★★ Submarines, torpedoes ‘the deadly fish will fly’, merchantmen – you have to love the detail Iron Maiden put into their war songs. One of the better songs of its type. HOOKS IN YOU ★ A song that seems to be about our old friend Charlotte The Harlot from the mention of ‘number twenty-two’, Hooks in You is a slightly grisly warning about being hung up to die… 63


BRING YOUR DAUGHTER TO THE SLAUGHTER ★★★ …as is the No. 1 hit Bring Your Daughter…, an unexpectedly big success on the back of this rather average album. Who would have expected a chart-topper, fifteen years after the band’s inception? MOTHER RUSSIA ★★★ Were Iron Maiden really writing about perestroika when they wrote Mother Russia? It seems so, implausibly enough. What a mixed bag of songs, eh? CONCL USION Fear of the Dark marked a turning point for Iron Maiden. The rationale behind its darker, rawer, less processed sound is understandable: just as Metallica – their nearest equivalents in terms of commercial success in metal at this point – had done between their …And Justice for All and Metallica albums, Maiden knew that a stripping-down was required if they were to avoid disappearing into prog-rock territory. Not that prog-rock is necessarily a bad thing all the time, but it would have meant a change in direction for the band which some fans, already disheartened by the pretentious crispness of Seventh Son, might have deemed a step too far. And so the band, with the about-to-leave Bruce Dickinson slightly dragging his heels, created a much lower-key album, in terms of both songs and production. However, in doing so they fell between two stools – a not-quite return to old-school, DiAnno-style pub rawness, and a not-quite advance into the new alt.rock sounds that were about to emerge from America. The result is a mixed bag and not one that is often quoted by Maiden fans as one of their best albums. Overall rating ★★★ 64


FEAR OF THE DARK

F

urther line-up problems lay ahead; however, this time with Dickinson, whose desire for a solo career had never been hidden from band or fans. Releasing a solo record and touring with Gers in his band, he returned to Maiden from 1992’s Fear of the Dark, which performed even less well than its predecessor. Bruce announced while on tour that he would be leaving at its end, leading to some slightly bizarre vibes within the camp. Dickinson’s departure caused a few ructions, as revealed by Kerrang! magazine in 1993 when they published an interview with a slightly inebriated McBrain: ‘He’s going his way, we’re going ours. Fuck ’im – let’s get a new singer! That’s it, cut ’n’ dried. My father, rest his soul, said to me once, “Son, if anyone ever shits on the McBrain name, they’ll only do it the one time.” He’s said, “Fuck you, I’m off.” If that ain’t shitting on you, then what the fuck is? I told Steve what my old man said, and I think he thought it was a sensible analogy! It seems to have been a culmination of things for Bruce. 65


He’s been writing screenplays, books, he’s got his fencing and his family. It could have been pressure from his wife, for all I know. He hasn’t said anything, but it’s a possibility. Plus, he went to LA, and y’ know what the fucking wankers are like out there! “Oh, fuckin’ Bruce Dickinson, you awesome motherfucker, duuude! Yeah, you’ll make a great fuckin’ career on your own! Leave that bunch of fuckin’ has-beens behind!” I love the geezer – I’ve worked with him for ten years. I’ll always be there for him, but I still feel hurt, ’cos I know he don’t like the band any more. At this stage, that ain’t fuckin’ cool… Some nights, I see Bruce sing like he hasn’t sung before. Tonight wasn’t one of them. Sometimes I can’t hear him, and wonder whether me monitors are fucked! He’s skylarking about – that’s OK, that’s the way he deals with it. But I eat, live, breathe and shit this band. And I do feel that he don’t really wanna be here. Everyone’s felt a little of the same about Bruce’s effort, and how he’s performing. But we mustn’t let it get to us. We’ve got so much strength from each other, and from the whole fucking deal, that it’s bonded us together. To me, this is still a Fear of the Dark Tour. It’s not a Farewell to Bruce tour. It’s got fuck-all to do with that. What I feel, although in a positive way rather than a hateful one, is good fucking riddance! I can’t wait to get to the end of this tour and find a new singer. He and I have done interviews together, where I’ve said stuff like, “I’m gonna take him outside and fucking do ’im!” It’s a laugh, but there’s also an element of truth in that! In my heart of hearts, I don’t want to be doing this. I want us to find a new singer and do a new album. There’s still a good fucking bit of mileage left in this band. We ain’t dead yet. Where there’s a will, there’s a fucking way. It’s gonna work for us; I know it will. Everyone’s so positive, It’s like the phoenix rising. We will rise again, as a stronger and more positive bird.’ Dickinson himself, from the centre of the commotion he was causing, told the same reporter: ‘[The tour is] very strange, really. But I don’t get the sense that it’s anything other than a really enjoyable 66


experience. This is certainly a lot easier than the other way of leaving Maiden, which would’ve been to sit there, gnashing my teeth and dumping it on the band after the tour’s over. This way, it’s out in the open. And all I see in the audience is people smiling. It’s like they’re saying, “Bye, It’s been great! That’s that!” I’ve had no hate mail or death threats, either! In fact, I’ve been knocked out by how broad-minded people have been… Experienced Maiden-watchers were probably geared up to have me disappear two or three years ago, around the time of Tattooed Millionaire [Dickinson’s first solo LP]. At the end of this tour’s first chunk, I was due to make another solo record, and looking back at the whole Fear of the Dark thing, it hadn’t quite worked out as I thought it might. I still think it’s the best album we did since Powerslave, but I also think I’ve been creatively sleepwalking for the last five years. The rest of the band and all the fans love being locked in the straight, narrow direction that is Maiden, and there’s nothing wrong with that. But I kept trying to deviate from the rut, saying, “Look what’s up here, guys!” I just ended up drained. I realised that I was trying to drag this huge thing somewhere it didn’t wanna go!’ Bruce added that some slight friction had always existed in the band: ‘There was much more friction between 1981 and 1983 than there ever was afterwards! We nearly came to blows on the Number of the Beast Tour. In fact, Steve wanted to fuckin’ sack me after two weeks, but Rod [Smallwood, Maiden manager] said he had to live with me! Steve isn’t a guy who naturally likes change. He’s conservative with a small ‘c’ – very quiet and reserved off-stage. He’s very determined about keeping control of Maiden, and maintaining its direction. All that early tension between us actually fuelled the band! But towards the end, there was this little something inside of me, screaming, “For God’s sake – there must be something different that you can do!” Some nights on the last leg, I’d think to myself, “Why does this feel so much like hard work?” You then start to realise that… actually, perhaps you don’t want to do this any more. 67


68


‘It’s about the music for us. Always has been. The bottom line is the music.’ – Steve Harris

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[The band] will probably become very much more Steve’s baby now, and I certainly don’t think it’ll plummet just because I’ve gone. Iron Maiden is like an old warhorse. The Trooper, the charging Roy of the Rovers, the straight arrow, the ball at the back of the net… that’s what Steve is. From a personal point of view, I wouldn’t like to see Maiden play Guildford Hall. I think that would be very sad. But then again, if people are happy doing that, it’s OK!’ Dickinson said of Steve: ‘We haven’t really had that many conversations over the last ten years! He’s not really the kind of bloke you could sit down with in a pub and pour your heart out to! He’s more of a “pass the salt” sort of chap. We have different approaches to feelings. He keeps all his locked up, and I’m in the process of trying to splatter mine all over my music. I would have liked to splatter more emotion over Iron Maiden’s music. But it doesn’t work. It’s not the kind of music you can do that with! [The lyrical imagery] was quite intriguing, ’cos no-one was doing it. But after a while, all the allegorical stuff I tried to slip in became so tenuous. I started to think, “Why don’t you just say what you mean?” If I’d had my way, Maiden would have expressed more feelings and opinions, from the very beginning. Steve has always felt that it’s dangerous to overanalyse things, and most of his songs are about fear… I actually think this is an opportunity for them to grab by the balls, and change. They obviously don’t see it that way!’ Of the final tour, Harris said: ‘Bruce is really only doing this because it’s already been arranged. I know he wants to go out on a high note and all the rest of it, but I also know he’d rather have left beforehand. Maiden aren’t going to split up. We were obviously disappointed at Bruce’s timing, but the situation’s known now, and we can find someone else. Bruce definitely jumped, rather than being pushed. I was surprised, because he seemed totally into the Fear of the Dark Tour’s first leg. I was actually the last one to know, because I was out in Florida, mixing the live album. They didn’t wanna tell me, ’cos they knew it’d do my ’ead in! The reaction was 70


disappointment, sadness, being pissed off, all at once! But we’ve all felt that he’s been doing so many different things, that something had to give eventually. The thing is that if he can’t give Maiden 100%, then we don’t want him in the band! That’s no disrespect or animosity, but there’s no point in persuading him to come back or anything. In fact, if he back-tracked now and said he wanted to stay, we probably wouldn’t let him! Personally, I think he’s maybe made a mistake, ’cos I don’t see why he couldn’t do his solo thing and Maiden. But I suppose he wants to do other things too, and Maiden are a hard-working band. It’s weird having someone onstage that’s going. Very odd. Both sides, if you wanna split up like that, wanna get on with their own things. At the moment, it’s in limbo, but we’re still doing really good gigs. It really pissed me off when someone suggested that we’ve only announced Bruce’s departure ’cos the tickets aren’t doing well! That’s a fuckin’ insult – we’d never do that. I believe we’ll carry on and be as good as ever. If I didn’t believe that, I would stop… Me and Bruce don’t ‘not’ get on. I like and respect him, and I like to think he feels the same, but I wouldn’t say we’re great mates. But that’s not to say we won’t go and have dinner at each other’s houses, but there’s no point in getting too upset. You can’t keep people on a ball and chain. Some bloke in Spain was saying, “I want to kill Bruce – he’s a traitor!” But that’s ridiculous! To be completely honest, this hit me at a time when I was at a bit of a low ebb anyway. But you have to pick yourself up and steam back in. That’s the way I handle things. I think it’s the only way I know how. When Bruce has problems, he doesn’t really let ’em out. I think I like to talk about problems more than he does… I suppose sometimes we don’t want to bother each other with our personal stuff in this band, ’cos there’s so much chaos on the road as it is. A lot of personal stuff I’ve been through in the last year, with my divorce and stuff, leaves you at a low ebb. Anything else that goes wrong really gives you a kick in the teeth… What worried me was that I’ve always felt confident about Maiden. Bruce quitting 71


knocked me for six, and I thought maybe the rest of ’em would be looking to me to be a leader. For a week or so, I didn’t feel like that, but now I feel stronger as time goes on.’

~ FEAR OF THE DARK

Released 11 May 1992

Tracklisting: Be Quick or Be Dead / From Here to Eternity / Afraid to Shoot Strangers / Fear Is the Key / Childhood’s End / Wasting Love / The Fugitive / Chains of Misery / The Apparition / Judas Be My Guide / Weekend Warrior / Fear of the Dark

BE QUICK OR BE DEAD ★★★ The target of Be Quick or Be Dead might have been televangelists, or it might have been corporate finance-mongers. Either way, they were in for the sharp end of Bruce’s tongue. FROM HERE TO ETERNITY ★★ A decidedly sexual tale of a woman who ‘rides’ a ‘motorbike’ – you get the picture. But what are the devil and Charlotte The Harlot doing in there too? AFRAID TO SHOOT STRANGERS ★★ ‘The desert sand mound a burial ground’ is just one of the more impenetrable metaphors in this abstract song, possibly written vaguely to avoid identifying one particular party as its subject. FEAR IS THE KEY ★★★ ‘You’re outnumbered by the bastards until the day you die!’ concludes Bruce in this song of futility, lost love and stale passion. It’s not cheerful stuff, this, is it? 72


CHILDHOOD’S END ★★★ War and its miserable consequences have often been the subject of Iron Maiden songs, and this one is one of the most thoughtful, painting a picture of children as war’s ultimate victims. WASTING LOVE ★★★ The grim postulations of a man who doesn’t believe in love make Wasting Love one of the darkest songs on this relentlessly downbeat album – one of the songs which made it a little hard to take for the fanbase. THE FUGITIVE ★ Pretty much based on the story of the famous TV series and then film, The Fugitive sets the events of the tale to music and nothing else. CHAINS OF MISERY ★★ Madness and madmen, prophecy and prophets… what more could Iron Maiden do to make this relentlessly depressing album any more downbeat? THE APPARITION ★★ ‘Can the soul live on and travel through space and time?’ asks Dickinson in this thoughtful, extended song which takes the form of a dialogue between Bruce and another unidentified person. JUDAS BE MY GUIDE ★★ ‘Is that all there is? Can I go now?’ Are the grimmest questions in this most dismal of songs, which is less than inspiring even if the music itself is well executed. WEEKEND WARRIOR ★★★ The sort of song which might have been more suited to one of the early, Paul DiAnno-led albums because it asks questions about being 73


74


‘I don’t even think that you can call Iron Maiden 100% real metal. Iron Maiden is beyond that and always has been.’ – Bruce Dickinson

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a real person and not merely a fake, Weekend Warrior asks questions about identity and falsehood. FEAR OF THE DARK ★★★★ A philosophical song that discusses the titular fear with some convincing images, the album’s title track is among the best on this less-than-enthralling album. CONCL USION What to say about this inconsistent album? Over time the appeal of Fear of the Dark has waned, inevitably, with its sleeve art – perhaps the first Maiden cover to be genuinely creepy, rather than pleasurably so – perhaps its most immediately memorable element. Overall rating ★★

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THE X FACTOR

B

ruce duly left the band and Maiden were plunged into an era from which many feared they would never emerge – the Blaze Bayley years. Blaze was the singer in the UK Britrock C-league band Wolfsbane, and although he had a perfectly decent set of vocal cords, he found it hard to step into the considerable boots of Dickinson, who was by now enjoying a profitable solo career as well as flying planes and writing comic novels. Of Wolfsbane, Bayley recalled: ‘We did three albums with Def America and two with Bronze Records. I was actually in a band before that, called Child’s Play, which kind of had a Thin Lizzy vibe. With Wolfsbane… we had been royally fucked so many times making the compromises we had to make, especially after the first album. The record company or management would always have their way, yet they would blame us if the record didn’t do well or if the show wasn’t well received. The few times that we did stick it out and manage to get it our way, it was successful. We were broke the whole time as 77


well, which didn’t help. But I’m very proud of the records I did with Wolfsbane.’ Fans never really accepted Bayley, although he recorded two competent Maiden albums – The X Factor in 1995 and Virtual XI three years later. Although sales of both were adequate at best, Maiden – and their manager Rod Smallwood’s new record company Sanctuary, by extension – kept things afloat with lucrative tours and the release of two compilations, A Real Live One and (oh, stop it) A Real Dead One.

~ THE X FACTOR

Released 2 October 1995 Tracklisting: Sign of the Cross / Lord of the Flies / Man on the Edge / Fortunes of War / Look for the Truth / The Aftermath / Judgement of Heaven / Blood on the World’s Hands / The Edge of Darkness / 2 A.M. / The Unbeliever

SIGN OF THE CROSS ★★★ A sinister tale of death and redemption at the hands of eleven holy men, Sign of the Cross seems to indicate Harris’ interest in religion at this point in his life. LORD OF THE FLIES ★★★ ‘We are lord of the flies’ muses Blaze Bayley on this song, co-written by Steve and Janick. It’s a pretty decent observation of good versus evil, too. MAN ON THE EDGE ★★★ This time it was the Michael Douglas film Falling Down which inspired the band, ‘car as hot as an oven’ and all. 78


FORTUNES OF WAR ★★ The fears enunciated by a man whose return from warfare has left him incapable of dealing with society. LOOK FOR THE TRUTH ★ With the ‘blade of hatred slicing through’, it’s apparent that Look for the Truth is the tale of a man taking his own life. More depressing subject matter, eh? THE AFTERMATH ★★★ The horrors of war appear again in this dark song – where soldiers are mown down in gunfire and poppies bloom, it’s not easy listening. JUDGEMENT OF HEAVEN ★★ Asking if we would change our lives for the better given the chance, this song is another reasonably thought-out bit of religious questioning. It’s pretty deep stuff. BLOOD ON THE WORLD’S HANDS ★★ ‘Brutality and aggression/Tomorrow another lesson’ pontificate the band in this slightly preachy examination of social ills such as violence. THE EDGE OF DARKNESS ★★★ Many Maiden songs take their inspiration from literature and film, as we’ve seen – but this one takes the cake, lifting its sentiments directly from Apocalypse Now and the book that inspired it (and this song’s title, evidently), Heart of Darkness. 2 A.M. ★★★ The sad tale of a drudge who gets home from work in the late evening and then sits pondering his meaningless existence, 2 AM is one of the darkest songs here. Were the band going through a collective bout of depression, one wonders? 79


THE UNBELIEVER ★★ A final peek into the grim subconscious of the modern male, or just another world-weary whinge? Whatever – when Steve talked about finally letting himself express his feelings, this looks like the vehicle for expression he was referring to. CONCL USION Blaze Bayley’s first album with Iron Maiden – which he had joined from Wolfsbane in a move reminiscent of a football transfer from the Third Division to the Premiership – was attended by much expectation. When the results turned out to be not half bad, the fans were relieved. This was regarded as a vindication of the new line-up by Maiden and their associates, quite rightly – but it slightly obscured the fact that the album didn’t contain any other stone-cold classics. Overall rating ★★

80


VIRTUAL XI

S

teve Harris told Hard Force magazine in 1993 of Fear of the Dark: ‘We really enjoyed the Fear of the Dark Tour much more than any other tour… We are really looking forward to touring again and playing gigs in towns that we couldn’t visit last year. Our huge enjoyment is obvious on the two live albums, and we’re very pleased with them. The energy of the band on stage is perfectly rendered. There really was this little extra something during the last tour… this is the first Maiden album that really reflects the personality of the band. On the previous albums, we used to hide our ideas behind allegorical terms, or we’d use mythology and legends: this was somehow masking our real feelings as human beings. This time, we show these feelings and this gave our music another dimension… we never found a standard musical formula… It simply doesn’t exist, and we evolve with every album. This isn’t an abrupt change, but something more progressive, and we do believe that we are changing. We are becoming more straightforward and we aren’t afraid to express our feelings.’ 81


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‘There are basically two categories of music: metal and bullshit.’ – Bruce Dickinson

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Always a football-loving band, Maiden had incorporated their obsession into the new album, telling Shockwaves: ‘Well, this [Virtual XI] is our eleventh studio album and over the last couple years in particular, more and more young kids are getting into soccer, not so much here, but in the rest of the world, people are soccer mad! Especially in places like Italy, Spain, and South America. We headlined the Monsters of Rock festival on our last tour and when we played Sao Paulo, I would wear Brazil’s soccer shirt, and when we were in Argentina we would wear the Argentina jersey. The fans over there give us loads of shirts because they know how much we’re into soccer, and the fans get so into it. So, we thought it would be great if we could tie the two together… it’s our eleventh album, the World Cup is coming up, and we’re totally into soccer. So to tie in with Virtual XI, we have the five members of the band and the eleven is made up of six international soccer players. It’s great fun, and it’s brilliant for me because of my love for soccer.’

~ VIRTUAL XI

Released 23 March 1998 Tracklisting: Futureal / The Angel and the Gambler / Lightning Strikes Twice / The Clansman / When Two Worlds Collide / The Educated Fool / Don’t Look to the Eyes of a Stranger / Como Estais Amigos

FUTUREAL ★★★ At last, a reasonably good Blaze Bayley song, on which the exWolfsbane shouter introduced Harris’ themes of society crumbling away amid the advance of the computer. THE ANGEL AND THE GAMBLER ★★ ‘Do you feel lucky?’ Sneers Blaze, but he’s no Clint Eastwood this 84


time – this song deals with the love of gambling and the roll of the dice. How very Motörhead. LIGHTNING STRIKES TWICE ★★★ An excellent evocation of a night-time storm, accompanied by appropriately atmospheric music, makes Lightning Strikes Twice one of the better songs of the Blaze era. THE CLANSMAN ★ ‘We’ll never be taken alive!’ Shouts William Wallace, sorry Blaze Bayley, before shouting ‘Freedom’ A lot. OK, now this is just silly. WHEN TWO WORLDS COLLIDE ★★★ ‘For the hundredth time I check the declination’ is not a line that is much used in popular music. Kudos to Dave Murray for putting together this astronomically-themed curio. THE EDUCATED FOOL ★★★★ One of the more intelligent, questioning songs that Maiden had been releasing over the last few years, The Educated Fool asks big questions and sounds good in the process. DON’T LOOK TO THE EYES OF A STRANGER ★★ Pure paranoia in verse – warning the listener never to stop being alert. But where did all this worry come from? COMO ESTAIS AMIGOS ★★★★ The nearest the band got to pure, emotional poetry in the Blaze era and a fine way to end any album, let alone this one. CONCL USION And so Blaze Bayley’s tenure with Iron Maiden came to an end. He had done a more than adequate job during his time with 85


the band, but had been faced with insurmountable reluctance to accept him from the fans as well as the fact that his voice was inferior to that of his flamboyant predecessor. The album on which he made his exit, Virtual XI, was marked by poor judgement on his band’s part. Why base an album’s title on the themes of football and the internet when the fanbase might not necessarily adhere to either? As with so many albums that deal with contemporary technology (see AC/DC’s Blow Up Your Video), the subject matter dates rapidly and with it anything that has been written about it. Now that IT is a part of most people’s lives but we’re still not living in a virtual world, the concept of virtuality seems a bit outmoded before it’s even begun. And so this album… Overall rating ★★

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BEST OF THE BEAST

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computer game called Ed Hunter was unsuccessful at this point, despite Blaze’s support for it before its release: ‘Iron Maiden was planning on doing a video game for a long time, but with this band, we always want everything to be the best quality and the best representation we can have for our fans. The technology didn’t really exist to do justice for an Iron Maiden fan until now. We were approached by a company in England, and they had a few ideas and a couple of the guys who were working there were actually huge fans of the band, so they had a really good handle straight away of what an Iron Maiden game should be about, featuring Eddie. We had some meetings with them and I had a real strong idea for the story where each album cover is a level of the game. So, the first couple albums is in the streets, which we turned into a whole virtual environment so you can walk around the streets and encounter all the different characters. And the Powerslave cover we turned into a whole 3D environment where you can walk into 87


‘Apart from death and taxes, the one thing that’s certain in this life is that I’ll never be a fashion icon.’ – Bruce Dickinson

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the pyramids, and you also get to go into the future and enter the torture chamber and the X Factor. The album covers are brought to life into a 3D environment and Eddie is a 100,000 [pixel] hologram character, which is more than the T-Rex in Jurassic Park. The game is titled Ed Hunter because you’re hunting down Eddie. The idea is, the heads of the five members of the band have been chopped off and you gotta go and find them! At the same time, you’re trying to survive Eddie, because he’s trying to stop you from getting to the next level.’ The multimedia effort went into overdrive at this point, with the writer Mick Wall compiling an official Maiden book at this point. As Steve said: ‘We actually had an official book released around the Somewhere in Time era, but this new book is basically about everyone in the band, and people who have worked with the band, from its conception up until now. It’s quite interesting, really, even for me, because of the different viewpoints. When I edited it, I basically left things as is, even the things I didn’t necessarily agree with; I think it’s important for people to have their viewpoints. The only things I really changed were any errors in technical points that were slightly wrong… I haven’t seen Dennis [Stratton] for a long time, and Clive [Burr] I saw about four or five years ago. But some of the other guys, even Doug Sampson, the original drummer, I still see him. And our first guitar players: Dave Sullivan and Terry Rance, I still keep in touch with them.’ A compilation titled The Best of the Beast kept fans’ interest high at this time, as did a bonus track recorded specially for it. As Blaze explained: ‘I think what also makes this album quite different is the fact that we recorded The X Factor for quite a long time and did a whole world tour. We took a little break in the middle and recorded a track called Virus for The Best of the Beast. And that gave us a lot more confidence when we started writing for this album. I had learned so much about the different areas of my voice and I made it stronger. I feel that the recording of this new album was also a 89


lot more spontaneous than the last. We just got the arrangements together and started recording before we even rehearsed the songs.’ Steve was now Maiden’s de facto producer, as he explained: ‘I do enjoy it, but it’s a lot of hard work. I suppose I kind of co-produced the earlier albums, and arranged the songs. In a way, I’m very glad I worked with Martin Birch on the previous albums because I learned a lot from it. I also mixed the two live albums, A Real Live One and A Real Dead One, because Martin decided to leave. So, I had to hire an engineer and, fortunately, I had some experience in the studio.’

~ BEST OF THE BEAST

Released 23 September 1996

Tracklisting: Virus / Sign of the Cross / Afraid to Shoot Strangers / Man on the Edge / Be Quick or Be Dead / Fear of the Dark / Holy Smoke / Bring Your Daughter to the Slaughter / Seventh Son of a Seventh Son / Can I Play With Madness / The Evil That Men Do / The Clairvoyant / Heaven Can Wait / Wasted Years / 2 Minutes to Midnight / Running Free / Rime of the Ancient Mariner / Aces High / Where Eagles Dare / The Trooper / The Number of the Beast / Revelations / The Prisoner / Run to the Hills / Hallowed Be Thy Name / Wrathchild / Killers / Remember Tomorrow / Phantom of the Opera / Sanctuary / Prowler / Invasion / Strange World / Iron Maiden

As best-of albums go, compiling an Iron Maiden collection must have been a doddle. Other than the non-chronological tracklisting – which pleased and annoyed fans equally, depending on their stance towards such things – Best of the Beast (see how the Eddie branding had become a staple by this point, eh?) Was a simple, by the numbers walk through the band’s long career, eighteen years long at this point. The opening track, Virus, wasn’t particularly exciting, unfortunately. Overall rating ★★★ 90


BRAVE NEW WORLD

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he inevitable occurred in 1999 when Bruce Dickinson returned to the band, alongside Smith, who played alongside Gers and Murray in an unprecedented three-axe line-up. Of the three-guitar setup, Murray told Undercover: ‘When we had the discussion, we never went into rehearsals to see if it was going to work, it was verbally done. Adrian’s going to come back into the band at the same time as Bruce is going to come back into the band, and that was it, so we sat down and started putting the feel together for Brave New World, it was a very natural process. We sat down and worked out… you know, there’s a lot of details to work on, but basically having three guitar players it really moulds together very well. It can sound like one big guitar or it can sound like three individual guitars. It depends what piece of music we’re playing at the time, but we get on well together and it’s a very natural environment, you know? There’s different ways of playing things on a guitar, so we kind of do it so it moulds together and sounds like one unit if you like… There are a lot 91


of slow passages, when you need that clean sound as well, so basically those amps are very versatile and also with the Fender Strats as well, they’re very versatile guitars so all three of us use Strats anyway. We’re like the old purists really, so it’s like Strats and Marshalls, but we’re using more of the clean stuff as well as the heavy stuff… We do a lot of harmony guitars and we do a lot of unisons, but it’s kind of going back to our influences as well. A lot of bands like Thin Lizzy and Wishbone Ash used harmony guitars and we’ve taken that concept and added it into our own unique way of playing. With each song there may be a harmony guitar or unison, but it’s basically whatever fits the song, we just like to take full advantage of it. Hey, you’ve got three guitars, so it’s just doing as much as you can, you know? Also it’s a thing where you want to complement that particular song, we wouldn’t just do it just for the sake of doing it, it’s there just to enhance a particular melody or [add] a musical statement to that piece of music… with three guitars we can do three guitar part harmonies, which we’ve actually used on some of the tracks and other times there would be unisons or there’ll be one guitar playing melody. Basically we have ample ammunition to do what we want. We’ve got a lot of ammo there!’

~ BRAVE NEW WORLD

Released 29 May 2000

Tracklisting: The Wicker Man / Ghost of the Navigator / Brave New World / Blood Brothers / The Mercenary / Dream of Mirrors / The Fallen Angel / The Nomad / Out of the Silent Planet / The Thin Line Between Love and Hate

THE WICKER MAN ★★★ If you’re going to reference classic UK horror cinema, you might as well use the best… 92


GHOST OF THE NAVIGATOR ★★★ A cross between Rime of the Ancient Mariner and a Nile-gods tune from the Powerslave era, Ghost of the Navigator is fantasy-horror epitomised. BRAVE NEW WORLD ★ But not really that brave, either in sentiment, verse or execution. Bruce’s delivery did give the band new vigour and elegance, but in terms of songwriting quality not much had changed since the Bayley era. BLOOD BROTHERS ★★ The usual anti-war diatribe, I’m afraid. THE MERCENARY ★★ Like The Trooper but about money instead of war, this song doesn’t break any new ground. DREAM OF MIRRORS ★★★ This song is another examination of reality versus illusion and, were it not for the endlessly repeated choruses, might be quite profound. THE FALLEN ANGEL ★★ Maiden doing Morbid Angel? Certainly the demonic lyrics seem to be edging that way. THE NOMAD ★ With lines like ‘Nomad, you’re the rider so mysterious’ you know you don’t need this song. OUT OF THE SILENT PLANET ★★★ Not, apparently an homage to the CS Lewis novel of the same name, but a decent sci-fi workout nonetheless. 93


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‘If heavy metal bands ruled the world, we’d be a lot better off.’ – Bruce Dickinson

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THE THIN LINE BETWEEN LOVE AND HATE ★★ Perhaps the most philosophical song Maiden have written to date, this track ends the album perfectly. CONCL USION Brave New World, announced by promo shots of the band waving flaming torches and hype that the new old line-up with Bruce on board would be the be-all and end-all of modern heavy metal, didn’t quite match up to expectations. Y’ know, all the elements were there – the three guitars (which on record sounded no heavier than two, strangely enough), the air-raid siren wails, the bass fills, the galloping drums – but Iron Maiden in the new millennium weren’t really too convincing. Overall rating ★★

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EDWARD THE GREAT

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ans breathed a huge sigh of relief, and tried their best to overlook the six-year hiatus in the band’s fortunes. By the end of the decade the metal world was once more appreciative of classic bands that had fallen by the wayside a few years earlier, and there was a lucrative place available for mega-tours from bands such as Maiden. Of the changes in line-up, Gers mused: ‘First, Bruce wanted to leave. If someone had told me that we wanted to kick Bruce out, I wouldn’t have stayed, but it was his decision to move on to other things. In that period we sat and thought if we wanted to go on without him, since in a band the singer is the frontman, which means in front of the band, something like the face of the band. When he leaves, you lose a great deal of your identity, and you must have great strength to redefine your identity. Iron Maiden have their identity, but Bruce was their face and it was hard to substitute him. Blaze came. There’s no comparison between Bruce’s and Blaze’s voice. Even he [Blaze] admits this. What’s important is that he loved the 97


band and gave his best to it. Bruce has an incredible range of almost three octaves. There was no chance, therefore, that Blaze could have reached Bruce’s standards, and that had a bigger cost for the live shows. On the other hand, Bruce’s technique is definitely greater, because, try as he might, Blaze didn’t have the technical foundations Bruce has.’ Janick added: ‘I believe every album of ours brings new elements. With time, everyone changes as a person, resulting in us bringing different ideas in the band. If you listen to every Iron Maiden album, you will see great differences. Can you compare Killers with Somewhere in Time, or Seventh Son with The X Factor? They have different aesthetics. You can consider one better than the other, but they have different elements. This happens with every record, because we do not define a style of writing, but we compose as we feel… most Iron Maiden releases are different from each other, yet 100% Iron Maiden… any band that survives more than two to three years follows a ‘rollercoaster’ career. You have highs and lows. You’ve just got to go through them and follow the train. You shouldn’t pretend to be something you are not. If you love what you’re doing and are sincere with yourself and the people that listen to your music, you survive. We went through a big period in the mid-nineties when we were out of fashion. But we were playing in packed venues and 80,000 crowds at festivals. The fact that we were considered out of fashion didn’t interest us. In any case, we were never really in fashion, although there were cases when we were on the radio or the TV, more out of luck rather than anything else I’d say. We play rock – popularity is the media’s job.’ Of the three-guitar setup, Gers explained: ‘Musically, I think everybody in this band can play their instruments very well. Each one of the three guitar players in this band could be the main guitarist of the band. There is no doubt about that, and our intention is to make the band sound better with the three guitar players, and that’s a challenge. Sometimes you simply don’t have to play because you 98


don’t need to put too many guitars on some parts. We don’t want to destroy our songs with too big guitar walls… We know how well we are playing and we know that we do our best. So you come up with some ideas you believe in and you try to make it sound great – the best sound you can get.’ Of capturing the three guitars in the studio, he went on: ‘We wanted a live sound, so we went in without a click track or anything like that and just recorded this album live, where we are our best. Because of that, this album has a live sound which sounds like… it moves, it breathes and it sounds just great, I think. It’s that kind of a thing that many bands don’t do at the moment, because they are playing with the click tracks… Their songs simply don’t breathe too much, and if you go back and listen to bands like Led Zeppelin and all those old bands you can feel that the thing is moving a little bit. Now people say, “that’s moving”, but I think it’s great because things like that should move and breathe a little bit.’ Asked if Bruce had rejuvenated the band when he rejoined, Murray said: ‘Absolutely it did. We did a couple of albums when Blaze came in the band, but when we heard Bruce was interested in rejoining the band… It was like OK – let’s put this together. Then we did Brave New World, which was a great reunion album… then we’ve gone from strength to strength with Dance of Death. The creativity is there and we’re having fun playing. So, this is definitely not a farewell tour. We spent six weeks doing that album. You get in there and do it quick, which is a great way to do an album. When you first get it home, you play the album to death… in the car, in the bath, everywhere… But now, I don’t listen to it all the time, but when I do hear it I’m very satisfied. It’s a strong stand-up album with a lot of depth both lyrically and musically. I think it’s a big album and when you put it on… The first time it’s like “Wow!” And the more you play it, the more it grows on you. We’re very proud of the album and it’s one of the strongest albums we’ve ever done. But obviously time will tell. It’s in the hands of the fans and it’s their opinion that 99


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‘Things come and go and change, but this form of music is very popular – there’s audiences everywhere for it. When you think of some bands, they’re big overnight and then forgotten the next week, but we’ve built up a solid groundwork, a lot of foundation. It’s good to know that we’ve got a few years to go yet.’ – Dave Murray

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matters most… Even when you start an album and the songs are coming together, you really don’t know what shape it’s taking until everything’s down. It just happens naturally. We don’t force the issue. We don’t say this is going to be another Powerslave or this is going to be another Brave New World. It just comes out.’ Martin Birch had retired after producing a string of Maiden albums, and the band recruited Kevin Shirley in his place: as Gers said, ‘Nowadays there is more digital equipment, the simplicity of the past doesn’t exist, and Kevin knows how to use them very skilfully. You see many people working with the mix, it’s like working with an atomic bomb – you have to know exactly what to do so it doesn’t blow up. The thing he has managed is to make us sound like when we are playing live. The thing that Martin Birch had managed was to avoid having a sound as a producer. He didn’t bring the sound of Deep Purple, Wishbone Ash or Black Sabbath into Iron Maiden. In contrast, what Mutt Lange did with Def Leppard and Bryan Adams was to have his signature on the sound. Kevin has succeeded in what we wanted; he makes the band sound like Iron Maiden and doesn’t try to make us sound like something of his.’ Janick said of the future: ‘You always want to redefine yourself. You want to be good at concerts, for the people that buy your albums. The first time I played at Donnington in 1982 with Ian Gillan was a top moment. If my goals had ended there, I would have stopped. But ten years later I went back. You just raise the barrier constantly higher. We try to reach new countries as well as places we have been to before, but with a fresh mood. Madison Square Garden sold out instantly! We also play huge festivals. The spark still burns in us. I always worry if anyone is going to come over to see us. We musn’t take anything for granted!’ Nicko added: ‘We all keep fit; the secret is not only to create good music, but to take care of yourself and have the will to carry on. If I had to give the secret of Iron Maiden’s longevity in one sentence, I’d 102


say it’s because we still like what we do. We’re a band for the stage. We compose and record music as much as we can, but that happens so that we have the opportunity to go out on the road again… I have accepted the fact that I won’t be able to go on forever. I have made a promise to myself that I will not continue if I can’t perform right. As long as God allows me to do so, I’ll be there. I don’t want to give you the right to write one day that Nicko is too old and he must be substituted because he can’t pull it off any more… When I was eighteen, I thought you were old at twenty-one, when I was twentyone I thought you were old at thirty – and when I was thirty…’ This, however, didn’t mean that Maiden had it easy when it came to recorded music. If anything, the fans were listening to their old classics with renewed fervour, which meant that the band had to try twice as hard to convince with their new music – which, with the 2000 comeback album Brave New World, was no easy task. Life was good at this point, despite the poor critical reaction to the album, as Murray told Undercover: “It feels fantastic, in fact we’re only kind of halfway through [the current tour] because we recorded the album in January and February and we toured over the summer. We spent about three and a half months in Europe and North America, and basically we were doing a lot of festivals and we were doing some big shows. It was basically all the older material, except for one new song, Wildest Dreams from the Dance of Death album. We’re going into rehearsals next week and it’s going to be a whole new production and a whole new show… it’s been a big year and we’ve been very successful. We still have a long way to go yet. But we’re still very excited and just from the response from the Iron Maiden fans throughout the world it’s been tremendous so we are very pleased.’

~

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EDWARD THE GREAT Released 4 November 2002

Tracklisting: Run to the Hills / The Number of the Beast / Flight of Icarus / The Trooper / 2 Minutes to Midnight / Wasted Years / Can I Play With Madness / The Evil That Men Do / The Clairvoyant / Infinite Dreams / Holy Smoke / Bring Your Daughter to the Slaughter / Man on the Edge / Futureal / The Wicker Man / Fear of the Dark (Live)

Sequenced chronologically to avoid mass annoyance among the more anal of the Maiden fanbase, Edward the Great was an unremarkable best-of, taking in the singles and basically nothing else. That said, EMI and the band did take the time to produce a limited-edition box set, a luxurious metal case with shot glasses and other fluff in it, at a correspondingly luxurious asking price. Just as Best of the Beast was for young metallers born in about 1980, Edward the Great was the perfect entrée into Maiden for your average baggy-arsed-jeans kid who arrived in the mid-80s. Overall rating ★★★

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DANCE OF DEATH

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ance of Death included more acoustic guitars than previous albums, explained Murray: ‘We’ve kind of used acoustics a little bit in the past, but I think Adrian, Steve and Bruce came up with the idea for that song [ Journeyman] but we actually recorded it with electric guitars as well… we thought, let’s bring in some acoustics and let’s have a go at it, and it actually sounds so much better being all acoustic. We’re still using some keys and synths in that particular song as well, but we thought let’s do something a little bit different. We have actually never done an acoustic track, so we thought let’s give it a go and I think it’s a real haunting melody and it’s really beautiful lyrics and stuff. It’s really sweet and I think with acoustics it just gives it another variation. If you listen to the Dance of Death album, it’s a pretty full-on heavy album with a lot going on, and then you come to the very last track and it’s like wow, it just brings you down. It takes you out of the album in a nice way, you know? I love acoustic stuff and it’s great to be able to do it with this band and on 105


this particular album. I think it’s just a timing thing, Maiden felt we were ready to put out an all-acoustic track on an album.’

~ DANCE OF DEATH

Released 2 September 2003 Tracklisting: Wildest Dreams / Rainmaker / No More Lies / Montségur / Dance of Death / Gates of Tomorrow / New Frontier / Paschendale / Face in the Sand / Age of Innocence / Journeyman

WILDEST DREAMS ★ The fact that Wildest Dreams was thought to be the most commercially sell-able song on this album speaks volumes. With this song as evidence, you’d be forgiven for thinking that Iron Maiden (and in particular Steve Harris) had lost his touch for songwriting, even on a temporary basis. Not good. Not good at all. RAINMAKER ★★★ A semi-biblical, fully fantastical tale of a sojourn in the desert – visions, magical powers and all. This was Maiden’s lyric machine fully back in action. NO MORE LIES ★★ With its meaning obscured, it falls to No More Lies to stand up as a reminder of how accomplished Maiden could be as musicians. But that three-guitar attack should be much heavier, Kevin. MONTSEGUR ★★★ The blood-soaked tale of Montsegur and the Knights Templar translates well into Maiden language, leading to an early high point. 106


DANCE OF DEATH ★★ Dancing with the dead in a scene straight out of HP Lovecraft, Bruce does his best to make this sound scary. He fails. GATES OF TOMORROW ★★ ‘You can’t blame a madman if you go insane’, chirps Dickinson meaninglessly, on a song which is far from Maiden’s finest hour. NEW FRONTIER ★ The spawn of a man, the devil has planned? Iron Maiden are winging it now, no matter what they say. PASCHENDALE ★★ Much, much better, as is usually the way when Maiden tackle a reallife war story. The tale of Paschendale stands up well on this frankly drab album. FACE IN THE SAND ★ Another ‘life-is-terrible’ meditation, and not really one that is required on this journey, thanks. AGE OF INNOCENCE ★★★ You can’t protect yourselves even in your own home’ say Maiden here, on a rare outing into the real world. Does it work? Lyrically, no; musically, reasonably well. JOURNEYMAN ★★★ A welcome entry into acoustic territory (which Maiden should do more often) provides an unusual and welcome end to Dance of Death. CONCL USION With its digital artwork and unprepossessing lead-off single, Wildest Dreams, Dance of Death (now there’s an album title 107


stolen from mid-80s Marillion if ever I saw one) didn’t stand much chance. Like Brave New World and, well, every Iron Maiden album going as far back as Seventh Son of a Seventh Son, the record was OK but not great. It was time, people were concluding in their thousands, to admit that where Iron Maiden now belonged was on the stage rather than in the studio. Overall rating ★★

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A MATTER OF LI FE AND DEATH

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he album was overshadowed by the gigantic world tour which followed it, and was perhaps evidence that the best place for a mighty band such as Maiden should be on the stage. In January 2001, for example, Maiden played a show at the Rock in Rio festival in Brazil to a crowd of 250,000. Murray laughed: ‘There was a quarter of a million there! We went on stage at about one o’clock in the morning because their shows are very late there, and we came off at about three or three-thirty or something, and that audience had been there all day. It’s tremendous that they’d stuck by us until right at the very end, and you could just feel it, there was electricity coming off these fans. I think the [cover] picture sums it up, that was a tremendous show – we had a wonderful time out there and to be able to document it and put it on DVD and stuff like that it’s been fantastic. You do a lot of shows and you film them, but sometimes it far exceeds your expectations. It has been magic and it had that 109


buzz, and I think that the Rock In Rio DVD has it, from the sound quality to everything. It’s mixed in 5.1 surround sound, so if you put that on and you listen to that on an actual system it’s like being in the audience. You can actually be there!’ Of the live DVD, Harris said: ‘We recorded a lot of the shows in Europe and we had done all the video stuff in Europe as well… At the end of the day it will probably be me editing the damn thing again! I edited Maiden England ‘88, Maiden Donnington and Rock In Rio as well. With Rock In Rio I wanted someone else to do it, because I have a particular editing style, I wanted someone else to do it, but it didn’t work out that way. I carried on and did it. Afterwards I was pretty burned out. Someone had to do it, so I did it.’ Bruce summed up the band’s festival reputation on BBC 6 Music, saying: ‘Well I suppose, Donnington, we’ve done it three times now, and this one’s certainly going to be a bit different because it’s going to be less of just being a gig and there’s more of an event going on. I mean the one that happened last year, the old fest there was, it has to be said, it was a bit of a disaster and gave the venue a bit of a bad name, and it’s a shame really because this is completely different circumstances this time around and there’s a cracking thing going on, you know, and there’s carnivals and funfairs and extreme sports and go-karting and there’s also an absurd amount of music!’ Harris added: ‘We have only good memories [of festivals], as these gigs are major events. Our longest-lasting memory is that of the 1988 gig before 105,000 people. Since that time, and because of a couple of deaths in the audience, the capacity at Castle Donnington has been cut down to 75,000, and it’s this number that came to support us last year. We’re very happy about that because Britain is in full recession. Despite the rain, we really got off, both because of the music and the atmosphere. In fact, it was a bit better than in 1988 ’cause we didn’t have any stage fright! The concert was filmed by eight 35mm cameras… We knew that it was going to be a special night. And now, we have the film!’ 110


Bruce told writer Fredrik Hjelm: ‘The Rock In Rio album is gonna turn into a Maiden classic because it is one show, no overdubs, and it sounds great! It sounds really, really strong. It was the last show of the Brave New World Tour, it was… broadcast live on TV to over 100 million people. It was a great place to do a live DVD and CD. So that is why we decided to do the recording in Rio, and since it was only one show, we knew we had to do it right, so there was a lot of pressure on stage, knowing we’ve only got one shot at this. Fortunately, we got it right!’ Of the band’s many live albums, Dickinson said: ‘Live After Death was assembled from three nights at Long Beach, with different tracks being selected from different nights. It was also messed around with a bit. Some of the backing tracks were fine, but Adrian’s guitar was way out of tune on one or two songs, so we went into a studio here in LA and did some guitar overdubs and I think I even did some vocal overdubs on Run to the Hills and some other bits. All these years I felt Live After Death as being the ultimate live Maiden record, that’s why it’s nice to have Rock In Rio. This has a vocal performance on it in which I’m a lot more proud of than Live After Death. It’s shitloads better, singing-wise. Whether or not it will replace Live After Death in the affections of everybody is more difficult to say, because a record like that is more a product of its time. The same goes for Number of the Beast… it wouldn’t matter if we did an album that was twice as good as that record tomorrow, it would still never be Number of the Beast.’ Janick Gers told writer Luxi Lahtinen: ‘I think that a lot of people think that you first name the album and then you write the songs, but it doesn’t happen like that way at all. We are doing what we’ve got, and then we write some songs and the ideas come up. And in the end of it you look at all the song titles, you look what you have got, what it’s representing, what the album is all about and what it could be. Like on, for example, Brave New World, we think that Brave New World would be a great album title. The image of the songs we did 111


‘The more guitars we have onstage the better, as I’m concerned.’ – Bruce Dickinson

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back then. We could see Eddie doing this and that. There is the same feeling here with this new album. The initiation of Brave New World could be really good because it’s… quite progressive, and that’s why it’s such a fitting name for the title of this new album.’ He added: ‘When we got together, we had a feeling of the album, and then we kind of put the ideas down – that title could be a good description of what this album is all about and where we are now. And in the end of the day, you can feel in your mind that we’ve chosen a really good album title for this album. Like six months ago, we didn’t know where to go with that album, but here we are now. I think if you look at the older Iron Maiden albums from Killers to Virtual XI, you realise that all those albums are all very different. When you listen to those albums you know it’s Iron Maiden, but they all have different kinds of themes. It’s like a big tree with lots of different fruit on it. But those are all growing on the same tree. And that’s, for me, what keeps the band exciting and fun, because you never know what’s going to happen next. You can never be sure about certain things, if you know what I’m saying.’ Of the band’s new-found success, Dickinson was entirely honest, saying: ‘To say we’re the same as we were seven years ago would be a load of rubbish. We’ve all got our credit cards, and can do what we want now, but in a lot of ways that’s better. When you’re forced by necessity to sit in a minibus for eight hours going to gigs, you tell yourself that it’s really important to be like that, because that’s the only way you can justify it: “It must be really important to be like this!” Success and money gives you back some of your freedom, because for that first five years you’re never outside the rock ’n’ roll bubble. You’re either touring or shacked up in some hotel, hiring the ballroom to rehearse frantically for your next album. And the only reason you get sent to record in the Bahamas or whatever, is that you can have a bit of a holiday, rest while you work, because they’re gonna send you out on the road again for nine months when it’s finished… I’m not pretending you don’t get pissed off with it. After 113


our thirteen-month Powerslave Tour, I really didn’t give a shit any more. I thought if this is what it’s gonna do to my head, sod it! I’ll go and be a folk singer. You get sick of the routine, of trotting it out every night.’ Asked about the musicians’ stamina in the face of exhausting, never-ending tours, Adrian explained: ‘I believe it has to do with the band. We play for the audience, and we have never shortened our set to make things easier. We didn’t downtune to be easier to sing. I’d say it’s like a cabaret, where you go to have fun. I believe that when the time that we can’t make it any more comes, we will stop. We also arrange the tour in such a way that we have days off for resting. We can’t go on doing what we did in the middle of the eighties.’ Bruce added: ‘What really does you in is America, ’cos you’re bashing your head against a brick wall most nights of the week… You say the same thing every night and they go wild. They’re like sheep. You really have to try hard not to become like them, or before long you’ll end up writing songs about rock ’n’ roll… That would be terrible, ’cos there’s nothing of substance to write about, it’s all crap, hot air and bullshit. It’s usually a bunch of irresponsible boozed-up people who’re far too old to be doing that respectably, going around screwing the female population and taking their money. Rock ’n’ roll is a licence to be irresponsible and get paid for it… everyone has a right to be that way occasionally – you have your greatest fun when you’re ‘carefree’ – but if you did it all the time you’d end up like a walking cliché that can’t drive a car or do the laundry, that thinks eggs get boiled by room service, and can’t go to a bank because they think cash comes from tour managers. I know people who honestly don’t know where to buy stamps, they’ve been on the road so long. Writing about the rock ’n’ roll lifestyle? Nah! It’s stupid, and Joe Walsh has done it all anyway. In many ways Spinal Tap has got it exactly right. The only sad thing is that people are laughing at heavy metal bands, without realising that it’s the whole business that’s like that. Whether it’s pop bands who go to the Montreaux Festival, 114


mime for thirty minutes and then collapse of nervous exhaustion, it’s all bullshit.’ On being a ‘corporate’ rock band with management to match, Dickinson explained: ‘Well, if you’re talking about our management, it’s probably true, but if you’re talking about the band, it’s a load of rubbish. A corporate rock band has its soul in its chequebook and wallet, and sits there churning out music to a prearranged formula to sell the maximum number of ‘units’ in America… I think our management is second to none – only the Genesis management is remotely as together – but we only notice they’re there when something goes wrong. You phone up and say help, the truck has broken down or one of the crew is in jail, and all of a sudden the right lawyer is there, with the right amount of money at the right time, and the guy gets out of jail. That’s a good manager. People say it’s cynical, but they’re usually jealous that you’ve got your act so together… you’ve got to remember that we’ve done nine to twelve months touring with all six albums. When you work that hard, and you get virtually no support from the media, you learn to capitalise on what you’ve got, to give everything you do maximum impact. That’s why we had those attention-grabbing album covers, so that people would go “Yeuch! It must be Iron Maiden.” It’s only recently that the media has become interested in us, that we can make people aware of our albums without putting someone with an axe through their head on the sleeve.’ Fans respected the band’s integrity, as Dickinson told the NME: ‘They have a great time with the music, and what’s important about someone is not what clothes they wear or what their haircut’s like; what’s important is what’s inside their head. All this thing about the denim being a uniform and all that, I don’t think the fans see it that way. They don’t see it as a uniform but as a way to identify with other people that like heavy rock. It’s like saying, I like heavy metal and I’m friendly… It’s not as if people go away from our shows punching other people’s heads in or chopping people up with axes because of 115


our songs. We loathe and despise violence. We place a great deal of thought into what we play and I think a lot of people place a great deal of thought into listening to what we play.’ Harris once said of Maiden’s army of fans: ‘We had some people follow us around for the whole of our last British tour and it’s not something I would’ve done when I was like fifteen, sixteen, no matter how much I was into a band… it frightens me in a way. There are some guys who have had Iron Maiden tattoos put onto their arms and that frightens me because it’s so permanent. I said to ’em, I said, “Fuck, they’re for ever, what you going to do when you’re fifty or sixty, you probably won’t be into us any more?” They said, “Yeah but we’re so fucking into it, the energy and we’re enjoying it so much, we’ll be able to remember the good times we had.” That’s the way they felt. It’s total dedication which to me is a bit frightening. You know what I mean?’ In the late 1990s the nu-metal wave rose and Maiden had some things to say about it. Harris: ‘First, I’d like to know what is ‘new heavy metal’, there are so many different musical elements nowadays that it’s not really like traditional metal any more. In the old days, there used to be music that was very distinct from one another, and Jethro Tull was pretty remote from Black Sabbath, for instance. Having said this, there was no shame in liking both. Today, everything’s changed and people have become more confined to a style, they tend not to appreciate such a wide variety of bands. They like only one style and they don’t listen to anything else. I think that the music industry is to blame for this… Our singles are hits, but only for a short period of time. Our fans buy them, then they climb in the charts for a week or so, then they’re replaced by something else. It’s true that we’re always a bit worried before the release of an album ’cause we don’t know how well it’ll do.’ The underwhelming Dance of Death was released in 2003, but by now Maiden’s fans were getting used to the idea of their band being past their commercial peak and concentrated on supporting them 116


Along with the group’s founder and primary songwriter Steve Harris, guitarist Dave Murray is the only member that has appeared on all of Iron Maiden’s releases.

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live. In any case, the DVD age had arrived and Maiden and their handlers embraced it fully, backed by EMI and funded by the success of Sanctuary, which had now become a serious commercial player (although this would not last: by 2006 the company was in serious difficulty). A CD single of The Number of the Beast was reissued in aid of former drummer Clive Burr, who had been stricken in recent years by multiple sclerosis, and the excellent The Early Years documentary DVD was released. As Steve told Rock Brigade magazine of Dance of Death, ‘We went on and made the album as we always do. I think the album is a little darker and a little more theatrical, maybe. The stage show will reflect that. As to why, I’m not sure. We don’t do anything upfront, really. We allow ourselves a six-week writing period and that’s all we do. We don’t write on the road, so we just go in with new, fresh ideas. It’s difficult because it’s not like we said, let’s make a darker album or let’s do something different. We did it in a different studio and a different city and maybe that influenced us somewhat… We recorded it from January 2003 until April 2003. Then we started touring in May and went out all summer and the album was released later on. It was a bit strange for us to go out and tour without having an album out. But we did lots of summer festivals. The whole experience was different for us because we normally do an album and then a few weeks later we go on tour behind the album.’ Maiden toned down their incessant touring in the new millennium, with Harris explaining: ‘I think we’ve just come to a stage where we’ve been touring for twenty-five years with each tour lasting at least nine or ten months. We just decided that we wanted tours now to be quality over quantity. Being realistic, we’re not getting any younger and you just need to pace yourself, I suppose. Plus if we tour for say four or five months instead of nine or ten we can carry on longer. We can play in the summer. Winter tours are more difficult. Everyone gets sick in the winter. Bruce got sick and we had to cancel and then reschedule four shows… I think it’s 118


important that you play the new material. And every album we do a new tour and we always play at least six new songs… If you look back at the history of what we’ve done that it’s always been the case. It’s a challenging set for us and it’s a challenging set for them.’ As Murray said, each tour is different, and the Dance of Death jaunt especially so: ‘Every time we’ve toured it’s been on the focus or strength of the new album. We could be like a cabaret band and just go out and do our old songs all the time, but the strength of Maiden has been about always moving forward. The only way to do that is to go out with the new material and we’re not afraid to do that. The reaction has been great. The fans know both the old songs and the new songs… You spend a few weeks rehearsing, but you have to take it out onstage in front of a live audience and that changes the pace of everything. But we’re well settled into it with the songs. This is one of the most theatrical things we’ve ever put together visually. So, the songs translate to the stage very well. Dance of Death itself starts off very moody and melancholy, but it gets very heavy. There’s a lot of light and shade. We don’t go out on stage for nearly two hours and bang, bang, bang. There’s a lot of subtle quiet things happening. Yet, there’s a lot of very up-tempo fast things… Maiden have always shone best in an arena. Obviously, we’ve played in clubs and stuff, but you just get a backline… The whole Maiden experience is the backdrop and the whole production. It also gives you space to move around. The thing with Maiden is that when we play the bigger places it kind of shines through, but we could go out with just a backline… no thrills, frills, nothing… But I think the fans expect a bit more. It’s an interaction between the band and the audience. Bruce goes a long way to talking to them and getting them involved… There’s a wonderful feedback. The Iron Maiden experience is an event!’ As always, Maiden were asked if the Dance of Death Tour would be their last – but Murray said: ‘Once we finish this tour, we’re going to take some time off. We won’t be doing much till 2005. We’ve been 119


‘Iron Maiden is an institution, and I’m delighted that I’m involved in it, but there was a time that I wasn’t delighted so I quit.’ – Bruce Dickinson

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everywhere twice on this tour. We need a break… we need to rest. We’ll definitely be coming back out again in 2005. There’s going to be another album as well. We’ve been documenting and videotaping this tour. So, something may be coming out from this tour… There was this thing on the internet that suggested that we were going to continue touring, but not for eight or nine-month stretches or go everywhere. Obviously, we’re not getting any younger, but we can still get around everywhere… We have no intentions of a farewell tour… we will be continuing.’ In 2005 Maiden played on the massive summer Ozzfest Tour run by Black Sabbath singer Ozzy Osbourne’s wife Sharon. However, the final date was marred by controversy when the band were pelted with eggs and forced to endure power cuts during the set: a row erupted between Sharon and Smallwood when it was revealed that the former had orchestrated the egg-throwing after alleged comments made by Dickinson towards Ozzy across the course of the Ozzfest. The issue remains unclear to this day, but Smallwood fumed at the time that it was the most unprofessional thing he had ever seen. Maiden – who retained their dignity throughout, largely by refraining from joining in the comments made by either party – finished off 2005 with a live album and DVD, Death on the Road. A completely unexpected return to recorded form came in summer 2006, when Maiden released their fourteenth studio album, A Matter of Life and Death. Much praised by critics and fans, the album undoubtedly precedes a renewed bout of touring and recording as we went to press. Harris remained sanguine as ever of the success of the new album, saying: ‘All I can say is that we are very lucky, we’re still very strong in most countries all over the world. If our popularity in one country goes down a bit, it goes up in another country, so we’re not relying on one country in particular to keep up our popularity. Whereas some bands rely heavily on success in Japan, we’re not in that position, fortunately. [The X Factor] sold well over a million copies worldwide, but a lot of people here in the 121


States thought we just vanished. That’s why touring for us is very important… and we don’t really make money touring, we pretty much break even.’

~ A Matter of Li fe and Death

Released 25 August 2006

Tracklisting: Different World / These Colours Don’t Run / Brighter Than a Thousand Suns / The Pilgrim / The Longest Day / Out of the Shadows / The Reincarnation of Benjamin Breeg / For the Greater Good of God / Lord of Light / The Legacy

DI FFERENT WORLD ★★ Maiden albums usually have reasonably good first tracks, and this is no exception: worth your time and then a bit more. THESE COLOURS DON’T RUN ★★★ Despite the great title, this is no aggro song – it’s a call for peace, effectively, and all the better for it. BRIGHTER THAN A THOUSAND SUNS ★★★ Lyrically profound at last and musically memorable, this song fits in most of Maiden’s considerable ambitions and does it well. PILGRIM ★★★ With a slow riff breakdown to die for and understated riff-age, Pilgrim is a filler tune that thinks it’s a single. LONGEST DAY ★★★ Valhalla? Valkyries? A high body count? What’s not to like, lyrically or musically? 122


OUT OF THE SHADOWS ★★★ With enigmatic imagery dotted through every verse, this song may not say much but it sounds intriguing. THE REINCARNATION OF BENJAMIN BREEG ★★ A useful lead-off single to create interest in the album, …Breeg even had its own website for a while. The song isn’t actually that great, but that wasn’t the point. FOR THE GREATER GOOD OF GOD ★★★ Does Harris’ religious questioning never end? Apparently not, fortunately for us when it results in songs like this. LORD OF LIGHT ★★ A peace song, a Satan song, a philosophy song – does it matter as long as it’s a good song? THE LEGACY ★★★★ A truly vast epic to wind things down? A standard Maiden trick – but this is a special one. CONCL USION Where A Matter of Life and Death recoups ground lost over the previous decade by a series of unremarkable albums is not in the extraordinary quality of its songs, not by any means: the songs are merely good, for the most part. What does make the album stand out is that Harris, who wrote most of the songs on the album as always, allows himself to stretch out into the epic, progressive territory that he has always enjoyed – but from which he has always restrained himself from full entry in case the band diverges too far from its original course. Not that A Matter of Life and Death is a Yes or ELP album, however – but there is definitely a sense of experimentation and an unhurried 123


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‘People get into metal and they don’t drift away from it. They might have families and move away a little, but they certainly don’t forget about it.’ – Steve Harris

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approach to the songs which suits the zeitgeist perfectly. We now live in a culture where heavy, complex and/or challenging music is treated with much more affection and tolerance than beforehand, when the three-minute pop single was king for everyone (not just for under-twenties, as it is today) – and in such a relatively mature environment, master songwriters like Harris, especially with such a lengthy career behind him, can thrive. The verdict? Not that this album is Maiden’s best, or even their second or third or fifth best. But it’s been received with an enthusiasm sorely lacking in the appreciation afforded the last few albums, and that, friends, can only be a good thing. Overall rating ★★★

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The Final Frontier

R

etirement then loomed for Maiden, as far back as 1982, but Harris stated: ‘I just want to play on stage and enjoy myself for as long as I can. Let’s face it, we all get old, and I know that I won’t be able to deliver this kind of performance forever… in ten years’ time I won’t be able to do this, and I tell you I don’t even want to think about that day. It’s gonna be a sad day when that happens. It’s like, all it is, I really get off on what I’m doing and I’m sure a lot of the younger fans would love to be in my position and maybe in a few years they will be.’ McBrain laughed when the subject of retirement came up: ‘I’m fifty-one years old now but I can still rock! Just as everyone else in the band. And I’m the most handsome guy in the band! Only joking. Seriously, we love our fans, and we love what we do. We’re like a big, expanded family. I mean, there’s many kinds of music for the kids to choose from today. Still they’re loyal to us. We in Maiden have always done the same thing really, we have [never] changed our principles. And still so many enjoy our music.’ 127


Asked why he had never contributed to the songwriting, Nicko mused: ‘I don’t know, probably I’m just lazy! Maybe the self-esteem isn’t very good either; there are such a lot of good songwriters in the band. Recently I’ve written a few songs with my wife, and I got interested in playing bass. New Frontier wasn’t first supposed to be a Maiden song, but my wife told me to show it to the band. So I did, and it made it on the album, after having been re-worked by me and Adrian. Bruce also wrote some new lyrics for it… I listen mainly to old stuff, like Eric Clapton, Deep Purple, Pink Floyd and Led Zeppelin. But my son likes new bands! He often asks me to play Brave New World in the car. Besides, I’ve never seen Maiden fully as a metal band. More of a progressive rock band. A little underground. At least we were in the eighties. Back then many people were scared of us, of our lyrics and the covers with Eddie. And many still question us.’ The media have still never really accepted Maiden, as Murray explained: ‘I think with this band, they’ve always kind of shunned us and there’s nothing we can do about it really. We just have to get on with life and carry on with playing music really, which means we’ve done it on our own backs. We haven’t had any help from those guys and so it basically proves that you can do it, you can go out there and be successful on whatever level it is, but you don’t have to have that type of exposure… Steve first formed the band in 1975, so if you go back that far it’s thirty years, but with this particular lineup, it’s still a long time!’ Nowadays, like Bruce, Nicko is a pilot in his spare time. Of this quintessentially rich man’s hobby, he explained: ‘The passion of flight… I decided that I wanted to fly like an eagle! I once flew with a guy in the Channel Islands out of Jersey and it was in February 1986. We hit some supercool air and the airframe decided to ice up. It was a fairly heavy thirty minutes of flight limping back to the airport. The engine also decided that it would rough run, that means that ice gets into the carbs and starves the fuel to the engine. We made it back and 128


when we landed we left a whole bunch of ice on the runway. It was very invigorating…’ The Discovery Channel once interviewed Bruce about his flying, which had developed so far by the end of the 1990s that he was soon ferrying band and fans to gigs: ‘I can only get up to 42,000 feet on a 757, so to get to the same level as Iron Maiden I’d have to get to 300,000 feet, which is the same as our crowd at Rock In Rio. That would be pretty exciting, I reckon, but unlikely at the moment. [As a child] I had a fleet of Heinkel 111s, Focke-Wulf 190s, Hurricanes, Thunderbolts, Lancasters and a Sunderland, not to mention a plastic Zeppelin. Every now and then one would plunge to a fiery doom from my bedroom window after being modified by cotton wool and lighter fluid… It took me ages to pluck up the courage to have a go at flying, mainly because I thought I couldn’t cope with the academic side of the exams (I was hopeless at maths and physics at school). After my first flight I just decided that I would do whatever it took to get up to speed and pass the ground school. I spent a year doing the academic exams and the flying exams. I already had a private licence and had a reasonable amount of experience. Once you have a commercial licence and the instrument rating to go with it, then you are in a position to try and badger people into letting you fly their airplanes. The next hurdle is getting a job and passing the ground and flight exams to fly jet aircraft – I found that very tough.’ Of the piloted trips in the wake of the 11 September terrorist attacks, he explained: ‘Almost every pilot I know regrets that fact that we are not allowed to have people visit the flight deck anymore. If we could let people up front, then we would. Where are the pilots of tomorrow going to have their first experience of flight? So many young kids became pilots after visiting the flight deck. In some ways TV shows… are the only ways of telling people what a great job it is… I’ve got to hand it to the 727 crew. They happily let me take off, whizz around the Everglades and do a touch and go plus three full stop landings in it. I really loved the 727, but I was also 129


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Drummer Nicko McBrain, seen here with guitarist Dave Murray, joined Iron Maiden in 1982, replacing Clive Burr. He joined the band in time to debut on their fourth studio album, Piece of Mind, and has remained with them since, contributing to a total of thirteen studio releases.

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very surprised at the Airbus A320. Both are pioneering aircraft from different eras, but I found both of them very harmonious in their design… After the aerodynamics of swept wings began to be understood, it was power-plants that were the big frontier. The 747 was plagued by its lack of power early on, and it’s only now that engines have been developed that are powerful enough to make super jumbos a reality.’ Of a possible collaboration with Dan Spitz of Anthrax and Dave Ellefson of Megadeth, Nicko explained: ‘It all started from Dan who has been my friend for years. Our wives meet up at church often and we hang out as well. He played some ideas that he had recorded in his basement to me and suggested to me to compose some ideas of my own so we can mix them. It took us a long time, but his very good ideas turned into good songs. So one day he calls me and explains to me that he had come in contact with Vanilla Ice, because he was religious as well, and speaking about his songs, he told him to join in. I was very wary before I had heard the songs, but believe me, the guy knows what rap means. In some parts, his voice is amazing. It’s not that easy for me to describe it to you, as it’s not Iron Maiden, it’s not Anthrax and it’s not rap. It’s a combination of ideas with a dynamic result. I have never heard of anything like it in the past… Dan was so excited about the idea, that he was telling it to everybody. On the other hand, Dave didn’t want anything to leak, because he wasn’t sure if he wanted to be a join or not. He helped us a lot and I think he would have stayed until the idea was complete, but the way things developed and it got known didn’t sit well with him and he left. We’ll see what happens… Maybe sometime we will complete it, after the tour with Iron Maiden, we will see.’ Asked if he had ever thought Maiden would evolve into a longterm project, Nicko said: ‘To be honest with you, no. I didn’t think how long it would last, if it would be five or ten years. I just hoped it would last as long as possible. And when I was with the band for a while, then the success started to build, and the fanbase was growing, 132


I knew it was something unique. Of course there are bands who are longer in the business, like Deep Purple and the Rolling Stones, but we have something extra, namely Eddie! And he has to be the face which fits the music and the band. Actually we’re touring just to show him to the people! [Laughs] Because if he’s not present at our concert, the fans get mad… In the early days when we finished a song, we would go to the pub, and celebrate. Now we only do that when we are finished with all the songs. Otherwise we wouldn’t have the time to record an album. We present our ideas, and we work them out. Usually Steve and I work out our parts first, and then the rest of the band comes in.’ McBrain added: ‘With us, you never know what you’re gonna get. Through the years we wrote so many songs, and we will never be able to play them all. We have thirteen studio albums, so there’s so much material. Personally I would love to play Alexander the Great live. That’s one of the few epic songs we never played live. Now that we have three guitar players, there’s no reason why we shouldn’t play it live. So my vote goes to that song. But obviously we go on tour to promote the new album. So we will play many songs from that. It features a lot of long songs, so we are unsure how we’re gonna fit that in, because you cannot play too many of these long songs. Normally we will play two-thirds of the new album. Of course we will play a few of our regular songs, like Iron Maiden, The Number of the Beast, maybe Run to the Hills. Because people want to hear those songs. Just like Hallowed Be Thy Name. It’s unthinkable we don’t play that song. It’s my favourite Iron Maiden song.’ After such a lengthy career, Harris was asked if he ever felt nostalgic for the old days. He laughed this suggestion off, remarking: ‘No, not really. I don’t do nostalgia. I never feel depressed or anything. I remember when the songs were played, but it doesn’t affect me any more than that. On the other hand, I’m quite sad that some songs could never be recorded. During Maiden’s early days, we had very few photos of the band ’cause we couldn’t 133


afford them. Except from memories, we virtually have nothing left from that time. Now, I have to say that I have many many photos and films, but only from the Number of the Beast Tour onwards. The beginnings of Iron Maiden are lost forever… At times, what was very clear at the time doesn’t seem to be any more. Times change, you evolve, you change your mind, and you forget things. But, when I think about it, I think that Maiden never screwed up. Our work is varied, and that’s a good thing. Some little details can be annoying, but, as a whole, everything’s quite satisfactory. Every time you release a live album or a video, you feel like you’ve turned a page and that you’re about to start on new projects. They may not be major ones, but you do get this feeling of novelty when you start on another chapter.’ Of his role in the band – which some might say is an autocratic one – Harris once explained: ‘Maybe that’s what people think because I started Maiden, but I don’t think I’m a leader. All the band members have their say and all of them are heard. There’s no star in this band ’cause Iron Maiden is a whole. I must admit that I’ve thought of [doing a solo album] a few times, but never really seriously. The problem is I don’t sing! I’d need to find a singer and I would quite like that. If I was to record a solo album, it would be either “subMaiden”, or progressive rock.’ He went on: ‘I’d rather have us considered a great rock band, and I think that the others also feel the same way. To be a rock band isn’t just about the usual heavy metal clichés. We don’t like stereotypes and we always try to renew ourselves. This is why we’re good, and I think that a few other bands should take a leaf out of our book… most heavy metal bands won’t admit it because they have some sort of tunnel vision. They were influenced by three or four of our songs and they claim they know nothing of the rest of our compositions. However, Iron Maiden remains unique. On the other hand, I’m happy to know that Maiden have been an influence. I take it as a compliment… We are a real good team and we get on really well with 134


each other. It’s about five mates pursuing the same goal. Before, it obviously was quite different, but now we all evolve together and the musical changes that occur affect all of us. It’s a different experience, and quite an enjoyable one.’ Of his age, Harris observed: ‘I like to stay with my family, go on holiday, play football and write. Nowadays, we can afford to have some free time and that’s really nice. As our tours are organised differently, we have more time for non-musical activities. We recharge our batteries in order to give even more on stage. Not so long ago, we had to have a year off ’cause we were burned out. We had the feeling we’d been working for a decade before we could take a break. Now, after some rest, we can get back into it more refreshed! I can write without any pressure and so I can more easily express my ideas and feelings… It’s a real luxury and I’d rather work like this than have a full rock ’n’ roll life… I have become more aware of what’s happening on the planet, and mostly since I’m a father. Since I’ve had kids, I think that I’ve become a better person, much more sensitive than I used to be. This is all due to my kids. It really sickens me when I hear that there are lunatics who chop kids into bits with an axe. Before, such news would have upset me, but now that I have kids of my own, it really makes me sick… We have a few regrets, but as a whole, we’re pretty happy. We are very grateful for what’s happened to us, and what keeps happening. It’s great ’cause each album was a step in a progression. On top of that, we became increasingly popular. We never were interested in anything else but music, and I am not ashamed of any of our albums.’ On 5 September 2007, the band announced their Somewhere Back in Time World Tour, which tied in with the DVD release of their Live After Death album. The setlist for the tour consisted of successes from the 1980s, with a specific emphasis on the Powerslave era for set design. The first part of the tour, commencing in Mumbai, India on 1 February 2008, consisted of twenty-four concerts in twenty-one cities, travelling nearly 50,000 miles in the band’s own 135


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‘The band has always stayed close to its fans and not sold out. That’s a very rare thing. Maiden has integrity. I think people appreciate that.’ – Adrian Smith

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chartered aeroplane, named ‘Ed Force One’. Maiden played their first ever concerts in Costa Rica and Colombia and their first shows in Australia and Puerto Rico since 1992. The tour led to the release of a new compilation album, entitled Somewhere Back in Time, which included a selection of tracks from their 1980 eponymous debut to 1988’s Seventh Son of a Seventh Son, as well as several live versions from Live After Death. The Somewhere Back in Time World Tour continued with two further legs in the US and Europe in the summer of 2008, during which the band used a more expansive stage-set, including further elements of the original Live After Death show. With the sole UK concert taking place at Twickenham Stadium, this was the first time the band headlined a stadium in their own country. The three 2008 legs of the tour were remarkably successful, and it was the second highest-grossing tour of the year for a British artist. The last part of the tour took place in February and March 2009, with the band, once again, using ‘Ed Force One’. The final leg included the band’s first ever appearances in Peru and Ecuador, as well as their return to Venezuela and New Zealand after seventeen years. The band also played another show in India (their third in the country within a span of two years) at the Rock in India festival to a crowd of 20,000. At their concert in São Paulo on 15 March, Dickinson announced onstage that it was the largest non-festival show of their career, with an overall attendance of 63,000 people. The final leg ended in Florida on 2 April after which the band took a break. Overall, the tour reportedly had an attendance of over two million people worldwide over both years. At the 2009 Brit Awards, Iron Maiden won the award for best British live act. Voted for by the public, the band reportedly won by a landslide. On 20 January 2009, Maiden then announced that they were to release a full-length documentary film in select cinemas on 21 April 2009. Entitled Iron Maiden: Flight 666, it was filmed during the first part of the Somewhere Back in Time World Tour between February 138


and March 2008. Flight 666 was co-produced by Banger Productions and was distributed in cinemas by Arts Alliance Media and EMI, with D&E Entertainment sub-distributing in the US. The film went on to have a Blu-ray, DVD, and CD release in May and June, topping the music DVD charts in twenty-two countries. On 2 November 2009, Janick Gers confirmed to BBC News that the band already had new material written and would head to Paris, France, to start composing and rehearsing the bulk of the new album. According to Dickinson, ‘we had probably the least amount of preparation we’ve ever had, which is bizarre because it’s the longest and most complicated record of all of them.’ After taking time off for Christmas, recording commenced in January at Compass Point Studios, Nassau, Bahamas, with Kevin Shirley producing. This was the first time the band returned to the Bahamas since they last recorded at Compass Point in the 1980s, to which Dickinson remarked: ‘The studio had the same vibe and it was exactly as it had been in 1983, nothing had changed! Even down to the broken shutter in the corner…same carpet… everything… It was really quite spooky. But we felt very relaxed in such a familiar and well-trodden environment and I think this shows in the playing and the atmosphere of the album.’ After a month in Nassau, the production was moved to Malibu, California, where the songs were mixed and additional vocals were recorded. On 6 April, Shirley told Blabbermouth that he had completed mixing the album, and commented on the final stages of its production on 6 May; ‘Bruce Dickinson flew in for a few days and sang all his parts before flying off to the four corners of the globe and Steve Harris stayed behind to finish the record with me. He’s pretty hands-on like that. Adrian Smith [guitars] dropped in from time to time to hear stuff, and like in any band, not everyone has the same end result in mind, but we get there.’ The album is the fourth for which Steve Harris receives writing credits for every track, following Killers, Brave New World and A 139


Matter of Life and Death, although the final track, When the Wild Wind Blows, is the only song which he wrote on his own. Adrian Smith explains that, in recent years, Harris has become ‘more into writing lyrics and melodies and arranging’ other members’ tracks and only ‘brings in one or two songs’ of his own. In a 1 July 2010 interview with Billboard, guitarist Dave Murray commented that the album mixes ‘straight-ahead, uptempo rock songs with good grooves with some other tracks that are kind of longer and more complex’, referring particularly to When the Wild Wind Blows, the band’s fifth longest song after Empire of the Clouds, Rime of the Ancient Mariner, The Red and the Black and Sign of the Cross. When interviewed for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette on 14 July, guitarist Janick Gers discussed the album’s overall sound: ‘We’re taking it to extremes… the one song we released [El Dorado] isn’t indicative of the rest of the album – there’s so many different feels and ways of playing on the album. We go through some different attitudes and take you to different places. There’s a lot of long thematic tunes on this album. And some very varied music.’ Speaking to Classic Rock in June 2010, Bruce Dickinson stated that ‘This one is probably the greatest departure from our sound. It’s been happening incrementally since Brave New World. That’s great, after doing it all for this long, to still be figuring stuff out. We could just be bored by it all, but we’re obviously not.’ The album, the band’s fifteenth, was released on 16 August, garnering critical acclaim and the band’s greatest commercial success in their history, reaching No. 1 in twenty-eight countries worldwide. At Metacritic, the album has a score of 71 out of 100 based on 15 critics, indicating ‘generally favorable reviews’. Classic Rock praised it as ‘densely layered and substantial’, as well as ‘beautifully paced and disarmingly complex’ and ‘a fresh take on a sound that has admirably withstood three decades of fashions and fads’.Kerrang! called it ‘a record that’ll still bowl you over in a decade’s time’, and MusicRadar stated that ‘Iron Maiden have created a work full of 140


hypnotic excitement, unconventional structure and dizzying vision… the group have succeeded beyond their wildest dreams.’ Brave Words & Bloody Knuckles called it ‘a thrilling and deeply satisfying glimpse into a brave new future for the people’s metal band’, while the BBC praised the album as ‘a remarkable achievement’, complimenting the band for ‘no compromises, just complexities and challenges and more moments of brilliance than perhaps even they thought they still had left in them.’ Many critics commented on where The Final Frontier rates in comparison to the band’s past releases, with Consequence of Sound deeming the album ‘easily the best from the six-piece since 2000’s Brave New World.’ AllMusic agreed with this, stating, ‘The Final Frontier still brings Iron Maiden closer to their aesthetic legacy and triumphant year 2000 rebirth than its two predecessors.’ Blabbermouth, on the other hand, praised it as ‘better than Brave New World’, explaining that ‘this is the reason Bruce Dickinson and Adrian Smith rejoined the band, the fulfilment of a decade of promise, and arguably the first time that Steve Harris’s post-Fear of the Dark cinematic vision has been backed up with consistently strong songwriting, spot-on production, and a fire-in-the-belly performance from the whole band’. The album’s supporting tour saw the band perform ninety-eight shows across the globe to an estimated audience of over two million, including their first visits to Singapore, Indonesia, and South Korea, before concluding in London on 6 August 2011. As the tour’s 2010 leg preceded The Final Frontier’s release, the band made El Dorado available as a free download on 8 June, which went go on to win the award for Best Metal Performance at the 2011 Grammy Awards on 13 February 2011. It was the band’s first win following two previous Grammy nominations (Fear of the Dark in 1994 and The Wicker Man in 2001).

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‘We are one of the last heavy metal bands. Iron Maiden has always been unique.’ – Adrian Smith

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THE FINAL FRONTIER Released 13 August 2010

Tracklisting: Satellite 15… The Final Frontier / El Dorado / Mother of Mercy / Coming Home / The Alchemist / Isle of Avalon / Starblind / The Talisman / The Man Who Would Be King / When the Wild Wind Blows

Satellite 15… The Final Frontier ★★★ A man who is stranded in space contemplating the final moments of his life. As always Iron Maiden pique the listener’s interest with an interesting and epic opening track. El Dorado ★★★ This single was a solid if unspectacular effort, a comfortable midalbum track rather than a spanking showpiece. Mother of Mercy ★★ A mid paced, reflective song, capturing Iron Maiden in a contemplative mood. The gentle jangle of unplugged guitars eventually give way to a dark, gothic chord progression. Coming Home ★★★★ The riff is pure stadium hair metal, whilst the subject could be another meditation on death, with analogy of a pilot finally seeing the runway lights after a long journey. The Alchemist ★★★ A fine example of the sterling fretwork we’ve come to expect from Iron Maiden, with a stuttering solo that ebbs and flows against the rhythm. Isle of Avalon ★★★★★ A zippy, zinging solo skates across the surface of the song before 143


breaking through the ice and slowly sinking into a rigid and deep heavy blues rock work out. Starblind ★★★ A light-hearted track about space travel, Starblind begins almost like a power ballad before breaking into a lolloping Thin Lizzy-esque groove. The Talisman ★★★★★ Another space-themed track, the heavy riff found here is an absolute delight. Maiden doing what they do best, and nothing else. The Man Who Would Be King ★★★ An epic with synthesized strings that features a very dense and hard to unravel three way guitar solo. The song is about a man making his peace with God. When the Wild Wind Blows ★★★ A cross between Spinal Tap and celtic folk music, this track features a breakdown worthy of Jethro Tull and their pastoral, vagabond prog. Concl usion This is Iron Maiden truly living their purpose. No compromises, just complexities and challenges and more moments of brilliance than perhaps even they thought they still had left in them. A remarkable achievement. Overall rating ★★★★

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The Book of Souls

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n 15 March, a new compilation to accompany 2009’s Somewhere Back in Time was announced. Entitled From Fear to Eternity, the original release date was set at 23 May, but was later delayed to 6 June. The double disc set covers the period 1990–2010 and, as on Somewhere Back in Time, live versions with Bruce Dickinson were included in place of original recordings which featured other vocalists, in this case Blaze Bayley. In a press release regarding From Fear to Eternity, band manager Rod Smallwood revealed that Iron Maiden would release a new concert video to DVD in 2011, filmed in Santiago, Chile and Buenos Aires, Argentina during The Final Frontier World Tour. On 17 January 2012, the band announced that the new release, entitled En Vivo!, based on footage from the Chile concert, would be made available worldwide on CD, LP, DVD, and Blu-ray on 26 March, except for the United States and Canada (where it was released on 27 March). In addition to the concert footage, the video release 145


includes an 88-minute tour documentary, entitled Behind the Beast, containing interviews with the band and their crew. In December 2012, one song from the release (Blood Brothers) was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Hard Rock/Metal Performance at the 2013 Grammy Awards. On 15 February 2012, the band announced the Maiden England World Tour 2012–14, which was based around the video of the same name. The tour commenced in North America in the summer of 2012 and was followed by further dates in 2013 and 2014, which included the band’s record-breaking fifth headline performance at Donington Park, their first show at the newly built national stadium in Stockholm, a return to the Rock in Rio festival in Brazil, and their debut appearance in Paraguay. In August 2012, Steve Harris stated that the Maiden England video would be re-issued in 2013, with a release date later set for 25 March 2013 in DVD, CD, and LP formats under the title Maiden England ‘88. Despite their advancing years, Iron Maiden’s intention to record a sixteenth studio album was first revealed by vocalist Bruce Dickinson in September 2013, who expected a possible release in 2015. The album was recorded at Guillaume Tell Studios, Paris with producer Kevin Shirley from September to December 2014, with the finishing touches added in early 2015. They had previously used the studios for 2000’s Brave New World, with Dickinson stating ‘the studio holds special memories for all of us. We were delighted to discover the same magical vibe is still alive and very much kicking there!’ The band originally intended to release the record earlier in 2015, but it was pushed back to 4 September while Dickinson received treatment for a cancerous tumour. The album’s title, artwork and track listing were revealed on 18 June 2015. Released by Parlophone, this is the band’s first original studio album not to be issued by EMI, after both companies were acquired by Warner Music Group in 2013. In the US, the album was issued by Sanctuary Copyrights/BMG, following BMG’s purchase of 146


Sanctuary Records in 2013. On 14 August, the band issued a music video for the song Speed of Light, directed by Llexi Leon. In addition, the song was simultaneously made available as a digital download and was issued as a single-track CD via Best Buy in the US. The Book of Souls is the band’s first album since 1995’s The X Factor to use their original logo on the cover. The artwork was created by Mark Wilkinson, whose previous works for Iron Maiden include Live at Donington (1998 remastered version) and Best of the ‘B’ Sides (2002 compilation), as well as The Wicker Man and Out of the Silent Planet singles covers. According to bassist Steve Harris, the cover art ties in with the title track, as the depiction of the band’s mascot, Eddie, is based on the Maya civilization, who ‘believe that souls live on [after death]’. To check the accuracy of the artwork, the band hired Mayanist scholar Simon Martin, who also translated the song titles into hieroglyphs. According to Martin, although the civilisation had no Book of Souls, ‘the Mayans are very big on souls… So as a title, it’s appropriate to Mayan culture, but it’s very much Iron Maiden’s own thing.’ Although not a concept album, references to the soul appear throughout, as do ruminations on mortality in general, with Harris explaining ‘as you get older, you start thinking about your own mortality and these things more’. Harris states that many of the songs were written and immediately recorded in the studio, adding to the record’s ‘live feel’. Guitarist Janick Gers explains that this involved abandoning their previous approach of spending several weeks writing and rehearsing, which meant that they ‘went into the studio with only outlines and finished writing the songs in the studio – so we were actually learning them, rehearsing them, and putting them down all at once’. According to guitarist Adrian Smith, the pressure this created was positive ‘because it snaps you into action’. Gers states that each member brought in approximately an hour of original music to the sessions, even though they ‘might only want to use fifteen minutes of it’, the result being 147


‘a really broad spectrum of musical ideas’. As with all of their studio collaborations with Shirley, most of the album was recorded live with lots of first takes used for added spontaneity. Shadows of the Valley, Death or Glory, Speed of Light and If Eternity Should Fail were the first songs written for the album, the last of which, according to Dickinson, was originally written for a potential solo album and features the band’s first collective use of drop D tuning. Smith states that Speed of Light and Death or Glory were two of a small minority of tracks completed prior to the recording sessions, and mark the first collaboration between Smith and Dickinson (without Harris) since both members rejoined Iron Maiden in 1999. With both tracks, Smith and Dickinson deliberately wrote shorter songs in an attempt to hark back to previous singles 2 Minutes to Midnight and Can I Play with Madness. According to Dickinson, Death or Glory is about First World War triplanes. Unlike the band’s previous two albums, 2006’s A Matter of Life and Death and 2010’s The Final Frontier, Harris does not receive a writing credit for all of the record’s songs.This is because Harris suffered two bereavements during the writing stage (‘an old schoolfriend and a member of the family’) which affected his creative output. The result was a more collaborative effort, with all members except drummer Nicko McBrain receiving a writing credit. One of Harris’ contributions, Tears of a Clown, which he co-wrote with Smith, is praised by Dickinson as his favourite track from The Book of Souls and is based on comedian Robin Williams’ depression and suicide in 2014. The release’s final song, Empire of the Clouds, replaces Rime of the Ancient Mariner (from 1984’s Powerslave) as the band’s longest song at eighteen minutes in duration. The track features Dickinson on piano for the first time and is based on the 1930 R101 airship crash. According to Smith, Dickinson spent most of the album’s recording sessions alone writing the song in a ‘soundproof glass box with his piano’, which he completed with assistance from McBrain. Smith 148


states that it was a challenge to record as Dickinson ‘laid down the piano on his own’ and the band then ‘played along to that’ while following Dickinson and Shirley’s instructions. For Record Store Day 2016, Empire of the Clouds was issued as a single on 16 April. Along with opener If Eternity Should Fail, it marks the first Iron Maiden album since Powerslave which features two tracks written solely by Dickinson. For the first time since 1998’s Virtual XI, the final track wasn’t written or co-written by Steve Harris. The Book of Souls is also the second album in Iron Maiden’s history (following 1986’s Somewhere in Time) in which Harris has not written or co-written any of its released singles. At ninety-two minutes in length, it is both the longest Iron Maiden studio album and their first double studio record. Dickinson comments ‘we all agreed that each track was such an integral part of the whole body of work that if it needed to be a double album, then double it’s going to be!’ The critical reception for The Book of Souls was overwhelmingly positive and it holds a impressive score of 80 out of 100 at Metacritic. It was scored 9/10 by Classic Rock, who stated, ‘it’s hard to think of another band of this vintage that would be capable of sounding this vital and inspired’. Kerrang! and Metal Hammer gave it full marks: the former labelling it ‘an album of extraordinary vision’; the latter ‘a gargantuan emotional journey through some careerbest performances that more than makes up for a five-year wait’. Blabbermouth were also extremely positive, scoring it 9.5/10 and deeming it ‘Iron Maiden’s most comprehensive and confident work since Brave New World and for certain one of their finest achievements overall’. The Guardian scored it 4 out of 5 and exclaimed that ‘The Book of Souls is marked by an impressive rawness that scratches against the album’s more grandiloquent moments’. Rolling Stone and Billboard were more critical, rating it 3.5 stars out of 5, the latter describing it as ‘outsized’ but ‘surprisingly engaging overall’. Both Q and Record Collector gave the album a mixed score 149


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‘When we started off, we weren’t even thinking of being a global band. We just ended up becoming that.’ – Steve Harris

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of 3 stars out of 5, the former criticising its ‘lengthy longueurs’ and concluding that it is ‘not one of their best’, while the latter asserted that ‘too much of the album is made up of endless mid-tempo guitar chug’ and that it ‘sounds much like any other Maiden album from their career-twilight period’.

~ THE BOOK OF SOULS

Released 4 September 2015

Tracklisting: If Eternity Should Fail / Speed of Light / The Great Unknown / The Red and the Black / When the River Runs Deep / The Book of Souls / Death or Glory / Shadows of the Valley / Tears of a Clown / The Man of Sorrows / Empire of the Clouds

Disc One I f Eternity Should Fail ★★★★ An eerie, psychedelic intro gives way to one of the heaviest, most joyously epic and anthemic album openers that Maiden have ever written. Speed of Light ★★★ This single pretty much became an instant classic, and although it does not fail to please, it feels a little by-the-numbers in certain respects. The Great Unknown ★★★★ This is a slow-paced, atmospheric track with a slow-burn that builds to a grand chorus. A classy track with a great pay-off. The Red and the Black ★★★★ This thirteen-and-a-half-minute track has a genuine urgency and 152


agility, and although the songwriting is somewhat predictable it is a delight to hear. When the River Runs Deep ★★ This is perhaps a little cheesier than the rest of the album, and for that reason not one of the strongest numbers, although many fans praised the classic sound. The Book of Souls ★★★★ An epic paean to the Mayans, this is a vast track that masterfully brings the first disc of the album to a close. Disc Two Death or Glory ★★★★ What Maiden album would be complete without an ode to the World Wars? This is an infectious number that demands to be performed live. Shadows of the Valley ★★★ A mid-paced number full of menacing hooks and riffs, this number will please fans of Maiden’s harder output but may sound a little discordant to some. Tears of a Clown ★★★★ A moving tribute to the late Robin Williams, with an enormous chorus. This is a well-thought-out piece that fits in perfectly with the album. The Man of Sorrows ★★★★ A blues-tinged number with dark textures and woozy crescendos. This track boasts a triumphant refrain that showcases Bruce’s incredible vocals. 153


Empire of the Clouds ★★★★★ This is a heavy metal suite unlike anything in their catalogue masterpiece, which is every bit as spellbinding as 1984’s Rime of the Ancient Mariner – A real album highlight. Concl usion The Book of Souls starts out strong, and continues to soar. The quality increases exponentially on the brilliant second disc, rising to it’s triumphal conclusion with Empire of the Clouds. To still be producing work of this standard so long after the band’s inception is quite frankly incredible and there are very few, if any bands that can boast the same. If Iron Maiden never release another album, then this will have been a fitting way to end an incredible career – going out on a high. Overall rating ★★★★★

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RECENT HISTORY

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he Book of Souls received the Album of the Year award at the 2015 Classic Rock Roll of Honour Awards, collected the 2016 Metal Hammer Golden Gold Award for Best Album, and won in the Best International Album category at the 2016 Bandit Rock Awards. In addition, it was also listed among the best albums of the year by many rock publications. In February 2016, the band embarked on The Book of Souls World Tour, which saw them play concerts in thirty-five countries in North and South America, Asia, Australasia, Africa, and Europe, including their first ever performances in China, El Salvador, and Lithuania. The band completed the tour in 2017 with further European and North American shows.On 20 September 2017, The Book of Souls: Live Chapter was announced. Recorded throughout The Book of Souls World Tour, it was released on 17 November 2017. In the summer of 2016, the group launched a mobile game, Iron Maiden: Legacy of the Beast and a pinball game with the same 155


Iron Maiden onstage at London’s O2 Arena in May 2017.

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name in 2018. Inspired by the game’s title, the band undertook the Legacy of the Beast World Tour, commencing in Europe in 2018, with North and South American shows following in 2019. On 23 September 2019, the band announced they would play the 2020 Belsonic Festival in Belfast and a headline show at Donington Park, England, as part of 2020 Download Festival. On 7 November 2019, they announced Australian shows throughout May 2020 joined by Killswitch Engage. Unfortunately, in May 2020, the band announced that all concerts for the year had been cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with tour dates rescheduled for 2021. On 1 October 2020, the band announced that they will release a live album from the Legacy of the Beast World Tour called Nights of the Dead, Legacy of the Beast: Live in Mexico City. Recorded in Mexico City in late September 2019, it is to be released on 20 November 2020. Iron Maiden have also been working on new material for the follow-up to The Book of Souls. There is currently no indication that Iron Maiden intend to stop producing music and touring, or even slow down. Despite the advancing years of the band members, they continue to thrive, drawing in new generations of fans every year. Iron Maiden were truly pioneers and we hope it will be a long time yet before we see them rest their ’ead.

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